Hemorrhagic ovarian cyst
Updates to Article Attributes
Haemorrhagic ovarian cysts usually result from haemorrhage into a corpus luteum or other functional cyst. Radiographic features are variable depending on the age of the haemorrhage. They typically resolve within 8 weeks.
Clinical presentation
Patients may present with sudden-onset pelvic pain, pelvic mass, or they may be asymptomatic and the haemorrhagic ovarian cyst is an incidental finding 4. A haemorrhagic or a ruptured ovarian cyst is the most common cause of acute pelvic pain in an afebrile, premenopausal woman presenting to the emergency room 5. They can occur during pregnancy.
Pathology
Haemorrhagic ovarian cysts typically develop as a result of ovulation. Secondary to a hormone response the stromal cells surrounding a maturing Graafian follicle become more vascular, and after the oocyte has been expelled, the Graafian follicle develops into a corpus luteum with a highly vascular and fragile granulosa layer, which ruptures easily, forming a haemorrhagic ovarian cyst 4.
Radiographic features
Ultrasound
Haemorrhagic ovarian cysts can have a variety of appearances depending on the stage of evolution of the blood products and clot ref:
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lace-like reticular echoes or an intracystic solid clot
a fluid-fluid level is possible
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thin wall
clot may adhere to the cyst wall mimicking a nodule, but has no blood flow on Doppler imaging
retracting clot may have sharp or concave borders, mural nodularity does not
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posterior acoustic enhancement
may be less noticeable if harmonics or compounding is used
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there should not be any internal blood flow
circumferential blood flow in the cyst wall is typical
If there is rupture of a haemorrhagic cyst, other findings may be present.
MRI
Relatively well-defined cystic lesion in association with the ovary. Signal characteristics can vary depending on the age of the haemorrhage.
T1: high signal
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T2: high signal
"T2 shading" is suggestive of chronic blood products and is more typical of endometrioma
haemorrhage evolves from the centre of the cyst and then extends peripherally (i.e. the centre may show a chronic stage of haemorrhage while the periphery is more subacute)
T1 C+ (Gd): no enhancement
Treatment and prognosis
Most haemorrhagic cysts resolve completely within two menstrual cycles (8 weeks).
Cysts with a typical appearance of a haemorrhagic cyst should lead to follow-up ultrasound or MRI imaging in 6-12 weeks if:
the cyst is >5 cm in diameter in a pre-menopausal patient
the cyst is any size in a peri-menopausal patient 2
In a post-menopausal patient, surgical evaluation is warranted.
A cystic structure that does not convincingly satisfy the criteria for a benign cyst cannot be considered a cyst and should be evaluated with a short interval follow-up ultrasound or MRI.
Differential diagnosis
Endovaginal ultrasound may be deployed for specifically diagnosing haemorrhagic ovarian cysts amongst other adnexal masses, as internal architectural details are accurately visualised 4.
Differential considerations on ultrasoundinclude:
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cystic ovarian neoplasm: the most helpful feature in distinguishing ovarian neoplasms from haemorrhagic cysts are
:papillary projections
nodular septa
colour Doppler flow in the cystic structure
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typically contains uniform low-level internal echoes with a hypervascular wall on Doppler ultrasound
more often multiple
on MRI, endometriomas show high signal on T1 and low signal on T2 (shading sign), although there is overlap in appearance with haemorrhagic cysts
See also
-</ul><p>In a post-menopausal patient, surgical evaluation is warranted.</p><p>A cystic structure that does not convincingly satisfy the criteria for a benign cyst cannot be considered a cyst and should be evaluated with a short interval follow-up ultrasound or MRI</p><h4>Differential diagnosis</h4><p>Endovaginal ultrasound may be deployed for specifically diagnosing haemorrhagic ovarian cysts amongst other adnexal masses, as internal architectural details are accurately visualised <sup>4</sup>. </p><p>Differential considerations on ultrasound<strong> </strong>include:</p><ul>- +</ul><p>In a post-menopausal patient, surgical evaluation is warranted.</p><p>A cystic structure that does not convincingly satisfy the criteria for a benign cyst cannot be considered a cyst and should be evaluated with a short interval follow-up ultrasound or MRI.</p><h4>Differential diagnosis</h4><p>Endovaginal ultrasound may be deployed for specifically diagnosing haemorrhagic ovarian cysts amongst other adnexal masses, as internal architectural details are accurately visualised <sup>4</sup>. </p><p>Differential considerations on ultrasound<strong> </strong>include:</p><ul>
-<p><a href="/articles/cystic-ovarian-neoplasm">cystic ovarian neoplasm</a>: the most helpful feature in distinguishing ovarian neoplasms from haemorrhagic cysts are:</p>- +<p><a href="/articles/cystic-ovarian-neoplasm">cystic ovarian neoplasm</a>: the most helpful feature in distinguishing ovarian neoplasms from haemorrhagic cysts are</p>