An Unexpected Challenge: Marked Small Bowel Obstruction Arising From a Poorly Differentiated Metastatic Mucinous Adenocarcinoma of the Distal Ileum in a Risk-Free Healthy Patient
Jennie An, Barbara Fontenelle, Riddhi Chaudhari, Rob Mulloy, Sofiane El Djouzi

TL;DR
A healthy man developed a rare advanced bowel cancer causing sudden symptoms, highlighting the need for better early diagnostic methods.
Contribution
This case report emphasizes the importance of developing improved early detection strategies for rare small bowel adenocarcinomas.
Findings
A 69-year-old healthy man presented with acute abdominal pain and was diagnosed with stage IV poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma.
The tumor was located in the distal ileum and showed metastasis, requiring surgical resection for diagnosis.
The case underscores the challenge of diagnosing rare small bowel cancers due to nonspecific symptoms.
Abstract
Adenocarcinoma, while constituting the predominant variant among small bowel cancers, is a component of the broader category of primary small bowel malignancies, which are notably infrequent in occurrence. The diagnosis of such malignancies is often markedly delayed, a consequence of their insidious onset and the nonspecific nature of the abdominal symptoms presented. A 69-year-old Caucasian male presented to the emergency department manifesting acute, sharp, and colicky abdominal pain accompanied by a single episode of vomiting, all developing over one day. His medical history was notable for gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and regionally confined prostate adenocarcinoma, which was under meticulous surveillance by the urological team. The patient's lifestyle was characterized by abstention from alcohol and tobacco, adherence to a nutritious diet, and a commitment to regular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetastasis and carcinoma case studies · Gastrointestinal Tumor Research and Treatment · Biliary and Gastrointestinal Fistulas
