Ruptured endometrioma in a nonpregnant patient: a case report
A ruptured endometrioma caused massive hemoperitoneum in a premenopausal woman presenting with abdominal pain and elevated cancer antigen-125, mimicking malignancy.
One-sentence paraphrase of the abstract; not a substitute for reading it. No clinical advice. How this works
This 2022 case report studied a 32-year-old premenopausal woman presenting with sharp abdominal pain, weight loss, leukocytosis and marked CA-125 elevation, with CT and ultrasound findings of a large left complex adnexal cystic mass, moderate hyperdense ascites, and omental nodularity suspicious for ovarian malignancy with carcinomatosis. Diagnostic laparoscopy showed the left ovary completely replaced by an endometrioma with a small superior rupture, with brown endometriosis deposits on the cyst, omentum, and peritoneal surfaces; extensive biopsies found no hyperplastic, dysplastic, or malignant cells. A key caveat is that, as a single case report, findings cannot establish diagnostic accuracy or causal relationships beyond this example. The paper is centrally about endometriosis — specifically a ruptured endometrioma presenting as hemoperitoneum that initially mimicked ovarian cancer.
Read from the paper's body, not the abstract. Not a substitute for reading the paper. No clinical advice. How this works
Abstract
Full text
7,251 characters
· extracted from
pmc-nxml
· 4 sections
· click to expand
Case
Background
Conclusion
Discussion
Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below. Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy (via DOI) is the canonical version.
My notes (saved in your browser only)
Answers must be backed by verbatim quotes from this paper's full text. Hallucinated quotes are dropped automatically; if no verbatim passage answers the question, we say so. How this works
Condition tags
MeSH descriptors
Citation neighborhood
Papers in the corpus that this work cites (lower rings, blue) and that cite this one (upper rings, green). Dot size scales with the paper's in-corpus citation count — bigger dot = more influential within the endo/adeno field. Click a dot to open that paper. [ expand to 2 hops ] — adds papers reached through this work's immediate citers/citees. Heavier; up to 60 extra dots.
References (7)
- Endometriomas: their ultrasound characteristics via openalex
- Prevalence of acute hemoperitoneum in patients with endometriotic ovarian cysts: a 7-year retrospective study. via openalex
- Ruptured endometrioma: main imaging findings via openalex
- Spontaneous rupture of endometrial cysts of the ovary presenting as an acute abdominal emergency via openalex
- The Shading Sign via openalex
- W2168809455 via openalex
- W2136940189 via openalex
Cited by (9)
- MORPHOLOGICAL FEATURES OF OVARIAN ENDOMETRIOSIS: CHANGES IN OVARIAN TISSUE AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE FOR REPRODUCTIVE FUNCTION 2026
- Ruptured endometrioma mimicking ovarian malignancy: a case report and literature review 2025
- Acute Abdomen Due to Ruptured Endometriomas-Case series from a Tertiary Care Centre 2025
- Endometrioma: A Comprehensive Review of Its Varied Presentations, Complications, and Impact on Patient Management 2025
- Role of computed tomography in imaging of endometriosis 2025
- Rupture Endometriomas Presenting as Acute Abdomen Infection in Hasty and Limited Resources Setting: A Pitfall Not to Miss — A Case Report 2024
- Diagnostic imaging of ovarian endometrioma rupture with hemoperitoneum 2023
- Spontaneously ruptured endometriomas presenting with symptoms and imaging findings worrisome for carcinomatosis: A case report 2023
- Endometriotic Stones; Can they exist? A case report 2022
Source provenance
- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-06-18T06:15:08.409253+00:00
- openalex
- last seen: 2026-06-10T17:14:06.276822+00:00
- pubmed
- last seen: 2026-06-04T00:34:54.200900+00:00