Photo Rounds

Large pelvic mass in a 46-year-old woman

Author and Disclosure Information

Were we dealing with a malignant tumor, or something else?


 

References

A 46-year-old woman sought care in our emergency department (ED) for intermittent abdominal pain that she’d had for 3 weeks. The patient had no unusual family history, did not smoke or drink, and had not traveled recently. Over the previous 3 months, she’d experienced dysmenorrhea and menorrhagia during her menstrual cycle. Two days before presenting to our ED, her menstrual cycle began and she complained of persistent lower abdominal pain and hypermenorrhagia.

The patient’s blood pressure was 139/90 mm Hg and her lab values (creatinine, hemoglobin, platelets, and prothrombin time/activated partial thromboplastin time) were within normal limits.

On physical examination, we noted an enlarged, palpable, fixed, firm mass in the lower abdomen (FIGURE 1A). We also noted considerably decreased bowel sounds on auscultation. A kidney, ureter, and bladder (KUB) x-ray revealed a soft tissue mass shadow in the pelvis (FIGURE 1B).

What is your diagnosis?
How would you treat this patient?

Pages

Recommended Reading

Fear, anxiety drive contralateral mastectomy, survey finds
MDedge Family Medicine
Sling surgery bests physiotherapy as initial treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
Acupuncture does not significantly increase pregnancy rates in IVF
MDedge Family Medicine
Innovative pricing tried to draw fertility patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Residents get good outcomes with minimally invasive hysterectomy
MDedge Family Medicine
New Candida species isolated in U.S.
MDedge Family Medicine
USPSTF breast cancer chemoprevention recommendations: We’re in this together
MDedge Family Medicine
Immune globulin may not block intrauterine CMV transmission
MDedge Family Medicine
ASTRO outlines five radiation oncology practices that should be curtailed
MDedge Family Medicine
Follow-up bone mineral density didn’t sharpen fracture risk assessment
MDedge Family Medicine