Intestinal obstruction from undiagnosed rectal and ileal endometriosis. Two clinical cases and review of the most recent literature

2010 
Deep endometriosis is a subserosal growth (for more than 5 mm) of funzional endometrial tissue outside the uterine cavity. Authors report two clinical cases of intestinal endometriosis localized in the anterior wall of the rectum and in the last ileal loop. Both cases were characterized by sub-occlusive symptoms, diagnosis performed by laparoscopy and surgical resection. Authors focus the various pathogenetic theories and dwell itself on the symptomatology often characterized by nonspecific abdominal symptoms such as chronic abdominal pain, sometimes in relation to the menstrual cycle, and intestinal disorders. If rectal bleeding is rare, more frequent are dysmenorrhea, dyspareunia and infertility may occur in up to 50% of patients. The diagnosis of intestinal endometriosis is very difficult and can be made by radiological methods (CT or MRI) or by endoscopic ultrasound only for the rectal localization but nowadays often the diagnosis is due to laparoscopic techniques. In the absence of guidelines the surgical therapy is not well defined. When is not necessary surgical emergency, according to the depth of endometriotic infiltration, elective surgery includes several surgical techniques both conservative and extensive such as segmental intestinal resection with hysterectomy and ovariectomy. In the most recent literature, finally, are reported over 50% of pregnancies after surgery.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    3
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []