Extrapelvic endometriosis: clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and management

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This narrative review examines extrapelvic endometriosis involving the diaphragm, thoracic cavity, abdominal wall, extrapelvic viscera, and the nervous system, focusing on clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and management and noting that diagnosis is frequently delayed due to nonspecific or atypical symptoms and the rarity of implants in many extrapelvic sites. It reports that endometriosis implants have been described in nearly every organ system and that presentations and management vary by location, highlighting that thoracic endometriosis most commonly presents with pneumothorax and typically requires multidisciplinary surgical involvement, while abdominal wall endometriosis classically features cyclic pain, a mass, and prior abdominal surgery but may occur without prior surgery and is managed primarily with excision alongside emerging local modalities. The paper explicitly limits its scope by excluding gastrointestinal and urinary tract endometriosis because these are treated as pelvic in this context, and it states that other rare extrapelvic sites need further research to define optimal strategies. This paper is centrally about endometriosis — specifically extrapelvic endometriosis clinical features, diagnosis, and management, with emphasis on thoracic and abdominal wall disease.

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Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Extrapelvic endometriosis can be associated with significant morbidity. Diagnosis is often delayed due to atypical and nonspecific symptoms, as well as the rarity of endometriosis implants in most extrapelvic sites. This review will describe the clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and management of endometriosis involving the diaphragm, thoracic cavity, abdominal wall, extrapelvic viscera, and nervous system. While gastrointestinal and urinary tract endometriosis are the most common sites of extragenital endometriosis, these sites may be considered pelvic and will not be addressed in this review. RECENT FINDINGS: Endometriosis implants have been reported in nearly every organ system, including the thoracic cavity, abdominal wall, hollow and solid abdominal viscera, and central and peripheral nervous system. Presentation and management vary by location. Thoracic endometriosis most commonly presents with pneumothorax, and surgical management should involve a multidisciplinary team. Abdominal wall endometriosis classically presents with cyclic abdominal pain, mass, and history of abdominal surgery, although may arise without prior surgical history; while surgical excision remains the mainstay of treatment, multiple local treatment modalities are emerging. Other sites of extrapelvic endometriosis are rare, and further research is needed on optimal management strategies. SUMMARY: Extrapelvic endometriosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis in patients with unusual catamenial symptoms. Multidisciplinary teams should be engaged to provide optimal care.
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Purpose of review Extrapelvic endometriosis can be associated with significant morbidity. Diagnosis is often delayed due to atypical and nonspecific symptoms, as well as the rarity of endometriosis implants in most extrapelvic sites. This review will describe the clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and management of endometriosis involving the diaphragm, thoracic cavity, abdominal wall, extrapelvic viscera, and nervous system. While gastrointestinal and urinary tract endometriosis are the most common sites of extragenital endometriosis, these sites may be considered pelvic and will not be addressed in this review. Recent findings Endometriosis implants have been reported in nearly every organ system, including the thoracic cavity, abdominal wall, hollow and solid abdominal viscera, and central and peripheral nervous system. Presentation and management vary by location. Thoracic endometriosis most commonly presents with pneumothorax, and surgical management should involve a multidisciplinary team. Abdominal wall endometriosis classically presents with cyclic abdominal pain, mass, and history of abdominal surgery, although may arise without prior surgical history; while surgical excision remains the mainstay of treatment, multiple local treatment modalities are emerging. Other sites of extrapelvic endometriosis are rare, and further research is needed on optimal management strategies. Summary Extrapelvic endometriosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis in patients with unusual catamenial symptoms. Multidisciplinary teams should be engaged to provide optimal care.

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Condition tags

endometriosisthoracic_endometriosis

MeSH descriptors

Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Endometriosis Thoracic Diseases Thoracic Diseases Thoracic Diseases Thoracic Diseases Thoracic Diseases Thoracic Diseases Thoracic Diseases Thoracic Diseases

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-07-02T06:07:54.402228+00:00
pubmed
last seen: 2026-07-02T06:03:18.988994+00:00
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last seen: 2026-05-11T08:34:28.763810+00:00
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