Ovarian Cyst Treatment
Treatment of ovarian cysts depends entirely upon what type of cyst you have. There are a few that are treated
more of less the same way, but not all ovarian cyst treatment plans are the same.
First of all, a big distinction is to find out if you have an ovarian cyst or ovarian tumor. Ovarian cyst
treatment is completely different from ovarian tumor treatment. An ovarian cyst is simply a collection of fluid or
blood, whereas an ovarian tumor is a "growth" on the ovary which can be benign (not cancer) or malignant
(cancer).
Let's set one thing straight. Ovarian cysts DO NOT become cancer. I see this on many sites created by lay people
and marketers and it drives me CRAZY because it scares people. An ovarian tumor, which can be cancer, CAN look like
a cyst on an ultrasound. However, that does NOT mean a cyst can become cancerous. It is up to a doctor to examine
you, review the ultrasound and determine what the chances are that something is a cyst or a tumor....especially if
it is a cancerous tumor. So, please go see a trusted physician so that you can find out which is which and what you
most likely have.
As far as ovarian cysts are concerned most can be treated naturally. Here is some BASIC information about
ovarian cysts that which lend themselves to natural ovarian cyst treatment.
Follicular Cysts
Follicular cysts are hands down the most frequent types of cysts that occur in the ovaries.
These cysts can often be found more than one per ovary and measure from a few millimeters (tiny) to a 15 centimeter
(6 inch) cyst. This is an ultrasound showing a simple ovarian follicular cyst (the black egg looking area). Notice
it has nothing inside it...no solid parts, no separations (called septations).
Follicular cysts are not “tumors”, which are actual abnormal cell growths or lumps on the ovary. You need to
know the difference. Before deciding upon what treatment is needed, it is crucial to understand the difference
between different types of cysts and to understand that some of them are not cysts at all. Some are actually tumors
that are hollow and look like cysts on an ultrasound or other scan. Rarely, some can even be CANCER, and you do not
want to mess around with wrong treatments for that. It’s far more effective and safer, to find a natural approach
to treatment when you know what you have!
How do you know if you have a follicular cyst? The best test is a pelvic ultrasound. Just like the one
above.
Why do follicular cysts form? The short answer is, although we can explain what is going on, we don’t really
know why it happens only some of the time. However, we know enough to give you VERY good ideas about what you can
act on starting right now!
What are the most common symptoms of follicular cysts? In addition to the pain from fluid or blood leaking out
and the abnormal uterine bleeding (abnormal periods), other symptoms can occur. Some of these are annoying, like a
pressure feeling in the pelvis, and some are basically surgical emergencies, like torsion. That is a twisting of
the ovary on it’s own blood supply. You should know about this and act on it rapidly or you can lose one of your
ovaries if you delay.
How are follicular cysts treated? The truth is that if you wait, almost all ovarian follicular cysts will just go
away. Surgery is not needed in most cases. The trick is how you can make them go away faster and how to prevent it
from happening again.
What happens if the cyst does not go away? While your doctor can take a good professional educated guess, there
is no way to know for sure if the persistent ovarian cyst is a physiologic cyst or an ovarian tumor. But there are
some pretty good signs that you have a cyst rather than a tumor. You do not want to miss the boat and be treating a
“tumor” with natural means that will never work. You can even risk your life, or at least a bigger surgery if you
delay. So, it’s VERY important to know what it what.
What about birth control pills? Do they help treat functional follicular cysts? The short answer is no, they
only help prevent future cysts from forming. How does this work? There is a complex reaction between your body and
the synthetic hormones in birth control pills. They work. They do prevent cysts, just like they prevent pregnancy.
There are also shortcomings of synthetic hormones and it’s important to know those as well so that you can make the
best decision for YOUR body. Unfortunately, at this time there are no "bio-identical" or natural birth control
pills.
Corpus Luteum Cysts
Another type of physiologic or functional cyst is known as a Corpus Luteum Cyst, or CLC for short. These are less
frequent than a follicular cyst, but can cause more problems and emergencies, especially internal bleeding. Why do
you need to know the difference? Because your doctor is likely to throw names around that distinguish between these
cysts and the specific dangers and treatment options. These cysts also produce different hormones that affect your
body and hormone balance. If you don’t know the difference you can be fooled into thinking something is safe when
it is not or into surgery that you don’t need.
You can get some of these cysts during pregnancy, and they are normal. The question is how do you know if this
is that kind of a cyst or something you need to worry about. It is all based on what is seen on the ultrasound and
symptoms and signs you may be having.
So, how do you know if you have a CLC? A missed period followed by some spotting, one sided pelvic pain and a
pelvic examination which finds a tender ovarian mass suggest that a persistent Corpus Luteum or CLC is the culprit.
However, it is important to make sure a pregnancy test is ordered because these same findings may be there because
of an ectopic pregnancy (tubal pregnancy). An ultrasound may not be able to tell these two apart and the treatment
would be completely different. There is another non-physiologic cyst which can cause similar symptoms, called an
endometrioma, that you need to be familiar with. That is treated in yet another way, often involving surgery, and
is a whole separate topic.
When a Corpus Luteum or CLC ruptures, the amount of bleeding and/or pain may cause this to be a surgical
emergency. That’s unusual but there are medications and herbs you may be taking that could make it much worse. You
should get to know what these are and what the problems might be.
Unfortunately, one third of women (33%) who have a problem with bleeding from a Corpus Luteum or a CLC will have it
happen again, possibly over and over. Knowing what you can do to prevent these can save more than one trip to the
operating room, or possibly even your life.
By the way, pelvic pain with or without ovarian cysts being present does not mean the pain is coming from a
gynecologic organ. In other words, there are other things down there in your pelvis. You could have appendicitis or
other bowel problems which have nothing to do with your gynecologic organs.
If surgery is necessary because of bleeding, it is often possible to do it through a laparoscope (bandaid
surgery). Usually the ovary does not have to be removed. Only the cyst is removed and bleeding stopped.
If the cyst is NOT ruptured, and there is no bleeding or torsion, it is reasonable to avoid surgery and “wait it
out”. Why? Because surgery, no matter how small, causes scars or adhesions to form. You want to avoid surgery if
your doctor thinks it is safe based on all of the things you just read about.
Theca Lutein Cysts
The least common type of physiologic or functional cysts are called Theca Lutein cysts or TLC. The key difference
is that these are usually multiple, on both ovaries, and occur all at the same time. Each of these cysts can be 1cm
to 10cm in size, so if there are multiple cysts the ovaries can be massively enlarged; up to 20-30cm on both sides.
How does this happen? The answer is simply hormonal over-stimulation of the ovaries due to pregnancy. Most often
this occurs due to very high beta-hCG levels (a hormone of pregnancy) often seen with twins or abnormalities called
"molar pregnancy" where the placenta develops but the fetus does not. This is a highly oversimplified explanation,
but the point is that high levels of hCG stimulate the ovary. The reason for this over-stimulation should be
evaluated. Sometimes these cysts can even look like cancer to the untrained eye. Quite a scare, but usually you
just need to ask the right questions and in most cases it is not cancer.
As always, you need to have a trusted healthcare practitioner with whom to discuss all of these issues. Only
someone who is taking care of you and can examine you and look at all of your records can render a complete opinion
about your best options. Use this as guidance only and find yourself a doc you can trust for your ovarian cyst
treatment!
Hope this helps get you going in the right direction. Truly, this topic has had many books written on it,
unfortunately most of which are medical textbooks or a bit misleading. To learn more, please consider reading
Ovarian Cysts: Effective Cures.
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