Ovarian Cysts Flashcards

1
Q

What are the types of ovarian cysts?

A
  • Functional
    • Follicular
    • Corpus luteal
    • Theca lutein
  • Inflammatory
    • Tubo-ovarian abscess
    • Endometrioma
  • Germ Cell
    • Dermoid
  • Epithelial
    • Serous cystadenoma
    • Mucinous cystadenoma
    • Brenner’s tumour
  • Sex Cord Stromal
    • Fibroma
    • Thecoma
    • Granulosa cell
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2
Q

Describe follicular ovarian cysts.

A
  • Cyst = >3cm - >5cm is at risk of torsion
  • USS
    • Thin walled
    • Unilocular
    • Anechoic
  • MOST COMMON ovarian cyst
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3
Q

Describe corpus luteal ovarian cysts.

A
  • Occur after ovulation
    • May rupture at the end of the menstrual cycle
  • USS
    • Diffusely thick wall
    • <3 cm
    • Lacey pattern
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4
Q

Describe theca lutein ovarian cysts.

A
  • Features:
    • Can cause hypertension
    • Often bilateral
    • Resolve spontaneously
  • Associated with pregnancy/high circulating gonadotrophins
  • USS
    • Bilaterally enlarged
    • Multicystic ovaries
    • Thin-walled and anechoic
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5
Q

Describe tubo-ovarian abscess.

A
  • Features of PID
  • Tender adnexal mass
  • USS
    • Ovary and tube cannot be distinguished from mass
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6
Q

Describe endometrioma.

A
  • Chocolate cyst
  • Associated with endometriosis
  • USS
    • Unilocular with ground-glass echoes (50% of cases)
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7
Q

Describe dermoid ovarian cysts.

A
  • Mature = benign, solid or cystic
    • USS
      • Unilocular
      • Diffusely or partially echogenic
      • May contain teeth, no internal vascularity
  • Immature = embryonic elements, malignant
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8
Q

Describe epithelial ovarian cysts.

A
  • Serous Cystadenoma - most common ovarian neoplasm
    • Usually unilocular
    • Often bilateral
    • USS
      • Unilocular
      • Anechoic
      • No flow on colour Doppler
  • Mucinous Cystadenoma
    • Usually Large
    • USS
      • Multi-loculated
      • Many thin separations
      • Low echogenicity due to mucin
  • Brenner’s Tumour
    • Small
    • Contain urothelial-like epithelium
    • USS
      • Hypoechoic
      • Occasionally calcifications may be seen
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9
Q

Describe sex cord stromal ovarian cysts.

A
  • Fibroma
    • Benign
    • No endocrine production
    • USS
      • Solid
      • Hypoechoic mass
  • Thecoma
    • Benign
    • May produce oestrogens
    • USS
      • Variable – echogenic mass, hypoechoic or anechoic
  • Granulosa Cell
    • Produce oestrogen
    • USS
      • Variable – may appear solid or cystic
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10
Q

Define Ovarian Cyst.

A

Fluid-filled sac in ovarian tissue - 8% prevalence in premenopausal

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11
Q

What are the risk factors for ovarian cysts?

A
  • PCOS
  • Endometriosis
  • Pregnancy
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12
Q

What are the signs and symptoms of ovarian cysts?

A
  • Lower abdominal pain
  • Swelling with pressure symptoms - i.e. urinary symptoms
  • Deep dyspareunia
  • Acute abdomen = torsion/haemorrhagic -severe right or left iliac fossa pain ± vomiting in torsion
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13
Q

What are the appropriate investigations for suspected ovarian cysts?

A
  • Pregnancy test
  • CA-125
  • TVUSS
    • Pre-menopausal - simple = manage depending on size; complex (<40yo) → LDH, aFP, b-hCG levels
    • Post-menopausal - simple or complex = CA-125 level → RMI calculation
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14
Q

What is the management of pre-menopausal ovarian cysts?

A
  • Simple/unilocular cyst
    • <5cm → no follow-up required
    • 5-7cm → repeat USS yearly
    • >7cm → MRI ± surgery
  • If recurrent or unresolved → medical = COCP → preventing ovulation will prevent recurrent cysts
  • If recurrent, sustained >5cm, suspicious/multiloculated = surgical → laparoscopic cystectomy
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15
Q

What are the indications for watchful waiting in ovarian cysts?

A
  • Unilateral
  • Unilocular (no solid parts)
  • Pre-menopausal and 3-10cm
  • Post-menopausal and 2-6cm
  • Normal CA125
  • No free fluid
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16
Q

What is the management of post-menopausal ovarian cysts?

A
  • RMI <200
      • All of:
        • Asymptomatic
        • Simple cyst
        • <5cm
        • Unilocular
        • Unilateral
    • = Repeat USS, Ca-125 in 4-6m
      • Resolved
      • Unchanged = repeat USS, Ca-125 in 4-6m
      • Changed = laparoscopic cystectomy
    • Any of symptomatic, non-simple features, >5cm, multilocular, bilateral = BSO
  • RMI >200 = CT-AP → MDT management:
    • TAH, BSO ± omentectomy
17
Q

What are the complications of ovarian cysts?

A
  • Ovarian cyst rupture
    • Most common with functional cysts
    • Conservative (pain relief) + watchful waiting
    • Laparoscopy ± cautery (if evidence of active bleeding)
  • Ovarian torsion (if >5cm; most common in dermoid)
  • Subfertility
  • Malignant change
  • Oophorectomy