Thoracic endometriosis: a case report and review of the literature

2021 
Thoracic endometriosis is characterized by the presence of normal functioning endometrial tissues in normal pleural, diaphragm, or lung parenchyma, and main clinical symptoms include pneumothorax, menstrual hemothorax, menstrual hemoptysis, and pulmonary nodules. Chest X-ray (CXR), computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), bronchoscopy, and surgical biopsy could be applied to the diagnosis of TE. Both drug therapy and surgical treatment were widely used to treat this disease, but no theory was used to guide the choice of treatment options. This paper introduces a case of menstrual hemoptysis due to endometriosis, and the final surgical treatment was chosen. The patient recovered well postoperatively and reported no hemoptysis during 2 months of follow-up. Reexamination of the chest through CT showed no ground-glass lesions or pulmonary exudative lesions. We make the following recommendations for patient selection when considering a surgical approach to the treatment of TE. Patients for whom surgery should be considered are those who (I) do not respond to drug therapy or relapse once drug therapy is withdrawn, (II) cannot tolerate drug therapy or who may wish to get pregnant in the near future (III) have limited lesions which are able to be completely removed during surgery. Patients in whom surgery is not recommended include those who have extensive lesions which cannot be surgically removed, including those with diaphragm or pleural involvement as the diseased tissues must be completely removed to avoid recurrence, and those who are unfit for surgery.
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