Abstract
Cocaine represents one of the most frequently used recreational drugs worldwide. Cocaine-related disorders mostly affect the nervous and cardiovascular system, although gastrointestinal complications are not negligible and sometimes life-threatening. The most common gastrointestinal manifestations of cocaine abuse are ulceration, infarction, perforation, ischemic enterocolitis, and rarely hemorrhage, with mesenteric ischemia being the underlying pathophysiological mechanism. Herein, we report a rare case of cocaine-induced small bowel obstruction in a young female patient, caused by chronic mesenteric ischemia and excessive intestinal wall fibrosis.