Abstract
Rationale:We report a case with inguinal subcutaneous endometriosis without typical cyclic dysmenorrhea and accompanied with a hernia sac treated with resection of the tumor and herniorrhaphy.Patient concerns:A 40-year-old woman had a painless enlarged inguinal nodule for 3 months.Diagnoses:Subcutaneous endometriosis accompanied with a hernia sac.Interventions:Ultrasonography showed a hypoechoic lesion (3.0 cm × 2.0 cm), and an inguinal subcutaneous tumor was first suspected. After surgical exploration, a cystic lesion was excised and the hernia hole was repaired by herniorrhaphy. The immunohistochemical analysis of the small endometriotic cyst-like lesion revealed calretinin (-) in epithelial cells and CD10 (+) in stromal cells, indicative of subcutaneous endometriosis accompanied with a hernia sac.Outcomes:The patient was followed up for 1 year and without recurrence.Lessons:Cutaneous endometriosis accompanied with a hernia sac can be presented without typical endometriosis-associated symptoms such as dysmenorrhea. Inguinal endometriosis might be the differential diagnosis of inguinal painless nodules.
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Chen, P. C., Cheng, C. H., & Ding, D. C. (2021). Primary inguinal subcutaneous endometriosis accompanied with an inguinal hernia: A case report. Medicine (United States), 100(14), E25460. https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000025460
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