A 24-Year-Old Woman With Acute Lower Abdominal Pain
This case report describes a 24-year-old woman presenting with acute-onset periumbilical and lower abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting, with leukocytosis and a large, compressible adnexal mass on exam. Pelvic ultrasound and contrast-enhanced CT identified a ~12 cm complex right adnexal cystic mass with peripheral vascular flow and trace/small-volume ascites, and subsequent MRI demonstrated multiple right adnexal endometriomas, pelvic endometriotic implants, and hemorrhagic ascites, leading to a differential that included torsion or hemorrhagic neoplasm but favored advanced endometriosis; CA-125 and CA 19-9 were elevated. The authors emphasize that large ovarian endometriomas can mimic torsion or malignancy and that serum markers are not diagnostically specific and should not be used alone, with advanced disease able to produce adhesions and extra-ovarian implants affecting pain patterns. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — it presents imaging and biomarker findings from advanced endometriosis presenting as an acute complex adnexal mass.
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-07-11T06:07:31.639957+00:00
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- last seen: 2026-05-17T02:30:03.883495+00:00
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