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2007-02-13 20:36:07 · 4 answers · asked by tanveer_sofi 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Pregnancy

4 answers

A corpus luteal cyst (CLC) is a very normal part of pregnancy and most women are unaware of having them. When the egg is released from the ovary at ovulation and the baby is conceived, the site of ovulation in the ovary becomes a corpus luteum cyst. For a few women this cyst can grow to the size of a golf ball (5 to 6 cms across) and cause symptoms such as quite distressing pain and sometimes a small amount of bleeding.

Most CLC's start to regress (or shrink) at around 10 weeks of pregnancy and disappear by about 16 weeks. In very rare cases, the pain becomes so severe that an operation is done to remove it, but this is unusual and most resolve on their own, with the pain gradually disappearing.

Generally an ultrasound will confirm that the cyst is causing the pain (often a low pain on one side of the abdomen), and the unborn baby is growing normally, not being affected. Some doctors will do further ultrasounds if the pain becomes more severe or to just montior the cyst's growth over a few weeks.

2007-02-13 20:39:01 · answer #1 · answered by msu_milk_chocolate 3 · 0 0

If a cyst can brew from a follicle which doesn't ovulate, trapping you in the first half of your cycle (resulting in a delayed period because you're not entering the second half of your cycle), you can also make a cyst on the other side of the cycle, i.e., AFTER ovulation. Such a cyst originates from the site of ovulation where progesterone is made, the corpus luteum, and if it's bigger than 2 cm., it's called a " corpus luteal cyst." A functional follicular cyst is a complication of attempting to ovulate, but a corpus luteal cyst is a complication of actually ovulating. This cyst is normal and is often seen in the first trimester of pregnancy. If such a cyst were to be misinterpreted as pathology and removed during early pregnancy, miscarriage can result, since it is the site of progesterone production, so important in supporting the early pregnancy.

2007-02-13 20:47:50 · answer #2 · answered by Whn_I_was_in_School 2 · 0 0

Luteal cysts
This type of cyst develops in the second half of the cycle after the egg has been released (at ovulation). As soon as ovulation has taken place in a normal cycle, the ruptured follicle then develops into the corpus luteum which produces progesterone in anticipation of a pregnancy. If the egg is not fertilised, the corpus luteum withers, progesterone levels fall and a period occurs. A luteal cyst is formed when the corpus luteum fails to wither when it should, and fills with blood instead.

Pain or spotting at ovulation (called mittelschmerz) can be caused by the release of blood from the corpus luteum when there is a slight drop in oestrogen at ovulation.

2007-02-13 20:39:12 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

luteal /lu·te·al/ (lavatory´te-al) bearing on or having the properties of the corpus luteum or its energetic concept. Dorland's scientific Dictionary for well being consumers. © 2007 via Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved. lu·te·al (lt-l) adj. Of, bearing directly to, or related to the corpus luteum. the yankee history® scientific Dictionary Copyright © 2007, 2004 via Houghton Mifflin business enterprise. revealed via Houghton Mifflin business enterprise. All rights reserved. luteal bearing on or having the properties of the corpus luteum or its energetic concept. luteal cyst consists of cystic corpora lutea, that are no longer information of ovarian malfunction, and luteinized cysts, that are frequently anovulatory. the former would be pointed out via the presence of a palpable ovulation papilla. Animals with luteal cysts tend to be anestrus simply by progesterone secreted via the cysts. See additionally luteal cyst. luteal section the point of the estrous cycle wherein the end results of the corpus luteum dominates and the cow is anestrous simply by severe ranges of progesterone interior the blood.

2016-09-29 02:30:36 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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