hematocysts

April 26, 2011

Understanding Hemorrhagic Ovarian Cysts

Ovarian cysts come in many kinds and in many women as well.  With a high benign rate of 95%, most of these are harmless.  These types of cysts are called the functional kind or also simple cysts.  Hemorrhagic ovarian cysts fall under this type posing barely any danger at all.

Why do women get this?

Hemorrhagic ovarian cysts are sometimes referred to as blood cysts, hematocysts, or even hematoceles.  Basing on the name itself, blood is a big contributing factor to the development of these cysts.  Basically, ovarian cysts have walls with blood vessels in them. Once a vessel breaks, the blood can find its way into the ovarian cyst making it a hemorrhagic kind.

When do women get this?

There is a certain time of the month when women are most prone to hemorrhagic ovarian cysts.  This period is none other than when you have your period.  These cysts usually develop over the course of a female’s menstrual cycle.  Just as fat as they show up, usually, after two cycles or more, they too will disappear on their own.   Oftentimes, these are even undetected.

How do women know they have this?

The symptoms of this kind are basically the same symptoms of ovarian cyst that you would expect with an cyst – which means that there usually isn’t any at all.  Most of the time, cysts come and go without you even knowing they were there to begin with.  However, when the cyst becomes more prominent, so do the symptoms.

Aside from abdominal or pelvic pain, which is usually misunderstood as one of the symptoms brought on by menstruation, there are others as well.  Bleeding in the abdomen is one.  You can know if this is so by detecting blood in your urine.  Bloating and swelling are a few others.  Another way you can tell is by having an irregular cycle, or oven total absence of it.

There are times when the pain may become more intense such as after or during intercourse and also bowel movement.

What are the kinds?

There are three general kinds of this type of cyst that can be found in women of all ages and from different backgrounds.  There are the ruptured ovarian cysts, the ovarian dermoid cyst, and the complex ovarian cysts.  All of these have their own effects ranging from being perfectly harmless to something quite severe because of the different characteristics each one has.

The Ovarian cysts no more outlines an holistic method for curing Ovarian cysts. Check out my Ovarian Cysts No More Review and Ovarian cysts no more fact sheet for more details on how this book can help you cure ovarian cysts naturally. Or go to the official website for more details.

Filed under Ovarian Cysts by Rebecca

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