Tuesday Poster Session
Category: Colon

Marisa Pope, DO
Jefferson Health
Cherry Hill, NJ
Endometriosis is the existence of endometrial tissue implants outside of the uterus that can occur on other solid organs within the body. Endometriosis most commonly occurs within the rectosigmoid junction within the bowel and only occurs 2-5% of the time within the cecum. The symptoms of endometrial implants within the bowel can present as chronic abdominal pain, hematochezia, constipation, diarrhea, dyspareunia. We present a case of cecal endometriosis masquerading as a colonic tumor in appearance.
A 46 year old female with a past medical of endometriosis s/p hysterectomy, chronic constipation who initially presented to the hospital for evaluation of abdominal in the LLQ. During her hospitalization she had a CT abdomen/pelvis with contrast that showed a cecal mass. Subsequently, she underwent a colonoscopy that showed a thickened fold in the cecum that was biopsied revealing colonic mucosa with mild chronic active colitis. Patient was discharged to follow up with gastroenterology and hepatology for MRI abdomen with and without contrast to further evaluation of her cecal mass.
She underwent an MRI abdomen with and without contrast that revealed a persistent mass like abnormality in the right lower quadrant and hepatic adenoma. She then underwent a PET scan to further evaluate the lesion that noted a hypermetabolic mass in the right lower quadrant that was suspicious of being a small bowel neuroendocrine tumor or GIST. Patient then followed up with general surgery for an exploratory laparotomy with ileal resection, partial colectomy with primary anastomosis for mass of the cecum. After the mass was resected they found it to be consistent with endometriosis and mass in the segment VII of the liver.
