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    HOME    |      PRIVACY POLICY    |    EXAMPLE QUESTIONS & ANSWERS    |      WOMEN'S HEALTH BLOG    |      women's health news
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Birth Control - Contraception
 
Periods
 
Pap Smears
 
Sexually Transmitted Infections
 
Women's Sexuality
 
Pelvic Masses, Cysts etc.
 
Menopause
 
Gynecologic Procedures
 
Breast Care
 
Vaginal Infections
 
Pelvic and Gynecologic Pain
 
Gynecologic Cancers
 
Prolapse
 
Urinary Issues
 
 
 






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Ovarian Cysts  
What is an ovarian cyst?


An ovarian cyst is a fluid-filled sac in the ovary. Many cysts are completely normal. These are called functional cysts. They occur as a result of ovulation (the release of an egg from the ovary). Functional cysts normally shrink over time, usually in about 1 to 3 months. If you have a functional cyst, your doctor may want to check you again in 1 to 3 months to make sure the cyst has gotten smaller. In certain cases, your doctor may want you to take birth control pills so you won't ovulate. If you don't ovulate, you won't form cysts.

If you are menopausal and are not having periods, you shouldn't form functional cysts. If you do have a cyst, your doctor will probably want you to have a sonogram so he or she can look at the cyst. What your doctor decides to do after that depends on your age, the way the cyst looks on the sonogram and if you're having symptoms such as pain, bloating, feeling full after eating just a little, and constipation.





   
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