https://www.selleckchem.com/products/icrt3.html Endometriosis negatively impacts the lives of countless women around the world. When medical management fails to improve the quality of life for women with either previously confirmed or suspected endometriosis often a decision must be made whether or not to proceed with surgery. When deeply infiltrating disease is diagnosed either clinically or by imaging studies often medical management alone will not suffice without excisional surgery. Surgery for endometriosis, especially deeply infiltrating disease, is not without risks. Aside from common risks of surgery endometriosis may also involve pelvic nerves, which can be hard to recognize to the untrained eye. Identification of pelvic nerves commonly encountered during endometriosis surgery is paramount to avoid inadvertent injury to optimize function outcomes. Injury to pelvic nerves can lead to urinary retention, constipation, sexual dysfunction, and refractory pain. However, nerve-sparing surgery for endometriosis has been proven to mitigate these complications and enhance recovery following surgery. Here we review the benefits of nerve-sparing surgery for deeply infiltrating disease. To describe a rare association of two endocrine tumours in a clinical case. A 54-year-old woman with a classic Papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) assessed by the Endocrinology Department of a tertiary hospital from May-2015 to May-2020. PTC was treated with a total thyroidectomy and lymphadenectomy in May-2015. Initial staging (AJCC/TNM 7th edition) T3N1bMx. Additionally, two ablative doses of 150mCi of 131-I (RAI) were administered until September-2016. No pathological uptake was found on the post-RAI whole-body scan at any level. Due to a persistent incomplete biochemical response in February-2017, a Fluor-dexosiglucose positron emission computed tomography (FDG-PET) was performed. FDG-PET showed an intense pathological deposit in the right adrenal, suggestive of malignancy. Right adrenalec