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Intestinal obstruction and mesothelioma of the pleura BJCM, Volume 3, Number 1.
Primary pleural mesothelioma usually presents with thoracic symptoms and is perceived to have a low propensity for metastasising. In pathological series, however, metastatic deposits have been reported in up to 50% of cases at autopsy; the most common sites are the adrenal glands, brain, bone, thyroid and lymph nodes.1 We present a patient with pleural mesothelioma who developed small bowel obstruction secondary to intussusception of intraluminal jejunal metastases occurring in the absence of peritoneal disease.
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