Intussusception is a surgical emergency in which a part of the intestine slides into the distal adjacent part. Adult colocolic intussusception secondary to a tumoral process is a rare but serious clinical condition requiring immediate surgical intervention.
We report a case of a 65-year-old male patient presenting with abdominal pain and distention, subsequently diagnosed with colocolic intussusception in the descending colon with closed-loop bowel obstruction with impending caecal perforation. An exophytic mass on the descending colon was discovered intra-operatively, prompting a subtotal colectomy with ileosigmoidal anastomosis and loop ileostomy with the suspicion of malignancy. The histopathological examination of the surgical specimen concluded a moderately-differentiated colonic adenocarcinoma with 40% mucinous component.
Adult intestinal intussusception is a rare but serious condition differing greatly in etiology from its pediatric counterpart. Its preoperative diagnosis is challenging in adults, which appears to be due to its imprecise presenting signs and symptoms; thus, the condition can be mistaken for other causes of intestinal obstruction. Adenocarcinomas remain the most common cause of malignant tumors in the colon, which also makes them one of the causes for colocolic intussusception.
Intussusception can appear as a surgical emergency even in the elderly, necessitating prompt surgical intervention to avoid intestinal ischemia and gangrene. Its diagnosis can be aided to a great degree by CT imaging.

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