A case of unique endoscopic findings of intestinal endometriosis exposed to the mucosa: aggregation of papillary protruded bulges from the submucosal elevation of the rectum
This case report describes the rare endoscopic findings of intestinal endometriosis on the rectal mucosa, characterized by papillary bulges and unique microvessel patterns, which were confirmed by biopsy.
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This paper reports a single case of intestinal endometriosis exposed to the mucosa in a 44-year-old woman evaluated for gastrointestinal bleeding, using colonoscopy with pit pattern analysis and magnifying endoscopy with narrow-band imaging alongside histopathology and immunohistochemistry. Colonoscopy showed a hemicircular rectal submucosal tumor covered with easy-bleeding papillary bulges, and imaging revealed straight microvessels arranged radially with an avascular, non–pit-pattern area on the bulge tops, differing from typical polyp or cancer appearances; biopsy confirmed rectal mucosal endometriosis. The authors note that surgical resection was suggested but not pursued, with dienogest treatment started instead, pain relief achieved, and no malignant transformation observed to date. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — it specifically documents unique endoscopic findings of rectal mucosal (intestinal) endometriosis exposed to the mucosa.
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- last seen: 2026-06-13T06:22:48.782012+00:00
- pubmed
- last seen: 2026-05-13T22:19:31.300640+00:00
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