Hemorrhagic Ovarian Cyst - The Scare Of Hemorrhagic Ovarian Cyst
Ovarian cysts are common to all women of child bearing age. This means that one can expect that after ovulation, the possibility of formation of an ovarian cyst is possible. However, these ovarian cysts begin to scare women when profuse bleeding is already present, thus called Hemorrhagic ovarian cyst.
Most of the ovarian cysts are asymptomatic in early stage. This is the reason why most women do not subject themselves to sonogram for detection. Although most of the ovarian cysts are benign and non-cancerous, the possibility of other complications should not be left ignored.
Hemorrhagic ovarian cyst occur when the ovarian cyst rupture. The rupture is caused by several factors such as stress, maturity or size of the cyst. The rupture means bursting of the cyst and the occurrence of bleeding. The content of the cyst will spread to adjacent areas at unpredictable rate. Pain the lower abdomen , depends whether the affected part is right or left ovary, and immediate attention is required.
Bleeding will lead to hemorrhagic shock if not attended to. The patient’s blood pressure will decrease, the heart rate will increase and the breathing will also increase. Her skins will be cold and clammy and she will be sweating profusely. At this time of emergency, intravenous fluid replacement is necessary.
The amount of blood and fluid during rupture depends on the size of the ovarian cyst. There are cases where the rupture occurred when the ovarian cyst was in the size of 10cm in diameter. Now imagine how much blood and fluid will spread if the size of the ovarian cyst that will rupture was 17cm in diameter. The results can really be ugly for the woman.
Hemorrhagic ovarian cyst is the last thing a woman would want to have both pregnant and non-pregnant women. Frequent episodes of this would mean a high possibility of ovarian cancer. Women will always be scared of what they don’t know and in the case of hemorrhagic ovarian cyst, the information is always available. Therefore, it is a must that once a woman has been diagnosed with ovarian cyst, she should plan what to do about it together with her doctor.






Hi, My name is Kimberly Barnwell or you can call me Kim. I have put up a small FREE resources in this OvaryCyst.org blog. I am been reading & researching about Ovarian Cyst for years and I would like to share with your all my experience and knowledge about Ovarian Cyst.
I hope you find it useful and informative.



