Ovarian cysts have a particularly serious impact on female patients, not only affecting daily life and work, but also causing serious harm to the patient's body. We must pay attention to them and actively prevent them.
Does ovarian cyst affect pregnancy
1. When ovarian cysts grow too fast or too large, they seriously damage female ovarian function and cause female infertility.
2. When an ovarian cyst ruptures, it can cause ovarian necrosis, leading to ovarian dysfunction and ovarian anovulation. If it is on both sides, the impact will be greater.
3. Ovarian cysts disrupt endocrine balance, interfere with the normal secretion of ovarian hormones and ovulation, leading to symptoms such as amenorrhea, uterine bleeding, hirsutism, and infertility.
4. Malignant lesions of ovarian cysts can damage most of the ovarian tissue, leading to ovarian dysfunction, anovulation, adhesion to surrounding tissues, and blockage of the fallopian tubes. These can all lead to female infertility.
The hazards of ovarian cysts
1. Lower abdominal pain: Due to the weight of the tumor itself and the influence of intestinal peristalsis and postural changes, cysts move within the pelvis, engulfing the stem and pelvic infundibulum ligaments, causing swelling, falling, and pain in the patient's lower abdomen. However, it is easily mistaken for ordinary gynecological inflammation and gastroenteritis.
2. Causes edema and affects daily life: In addition to loss of appetite, weight loss, and abdominal distension, ovarian cyst patients may also cause vomiting, fever, and abdominal pain. Later on, abdominal and limb edema may occur.
3. Causing premature aging of women's appearance: Ovarian cysts can also cause endocrine disorders in women, which can lead to premature aging.
4. Causes of miscarriage and dystocia: Premature delivery of ovarian cysts may cause miscarriage, interruption of pregnancy can easily cause torsion of the ovarian cyst stem, and in late pregnancy, if the torsion is large, it may cause abnormal fetal position and block the birth canal for dystocia.
5. Infertility: Early ovarian cysts, abdominal pain, increased vaginal discharge, yellow vaginal discharge, and menstrual abnormalities. When cysts affect hormone production, symptoms such as irregular vaginal bleeding or increased hair may occur. In the mid to late stage, patients may experience symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, frequent urination, and painful urination. If left untreated, they may become infertile.
6. Cancer occurrence, life-threatening: Enlarged ovarian cysts are prone to infection, distortion, bleeding, or rupture, posing a life-threatening threat to patients. Tumorous cysts can lead to cancer.