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Follicle: Normal physiologic cyst < 1 cm in diameter
Dominant follicle may measure up to 3 cm
Functional cysts: Can measure up to 3-10 cm
Corpus luteal cyst: Dominant follicle after ovulation
Follicular cyst: Normal mature follicle fails to involute
Hemorrhagic cyst: Hemorrhage into functional cyst
US mainstay of ovarian imaging; MR in limited circumstances
Well-marginated round or ovoid structure within borders of ovary & having no solid component
Thin wall (< 3 mm)
No internal septa, nodule, fat, Ca²⁺, or vascularity
↑ heterogeneity with hemorrhage: Internal reticulations (or lace-like pattern) of clot mixed with tiny cystic spaces vs. layering debris
Usually asymptomatic; pain if large or complicated by rupture, hemorrhage, or torsion
Treatment/prognosis
> 90% of all functional cysts resolve spontaneously
Cysts < 3 cm should be considered physiologic in pre- & postmenarchal children
Cysts up to 4-5 cm usually monitored with surveillance US
Surgery vs. further imaging considered in larger cysts due to risk of torsion or neoplasm
For resection, ovarian-sparing approach preferred if benign etiology suspected
With complex ovarian cystic lesion in child, must consider: Could this be torsion, neoplasm, or other pathology
Low threshold for follow-up US of asymptomatic cyst in 4-6 weeks if initial study unclear (due to size or mild complexity)
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