Cyst
A cyst is a closed sac, having a distinct membrane and division on the nearby tissue. It may contain air, fluids, or semi-solid material. A collection of pus is called an abscess, not a cyst. Once formed, a cyst could go away on its own or may have to be removed through surgery.
Locations
- Acne cyst - Pseudocysts associated with cystic acne. Actually an inflammatory nodule with or without an associated epidermoid inclusion cyst.
- Arachnoid cyst (between the surface of the brain and the cranial base or on the arachnoid membrane)
- Baker's cyst or popliteal cyst (behind the knee joint)
- Bartholin's cyst
- Breast cyst
- Chalazion cyst (eyelid)
- Colloid cyst
- Crain's backs
- Cysticercal cyst (the larval stage of Taenia sp.)
- Dentigerous cyst (associated with the crowns of non-erupted teeth)
- Dermoid cyst (ovaries, testes, many other locations from head to tailbone)
- Epididymal cyst (found in the vessels attached to the testes)
- Ganglion cyst (hand/foot joints and tendons)
- Glial cyst (in the brain)
- Gartner's duct cyst (vaginal or vulvar cyst of embryological origin)
- Hydatid cyst (larval stage of Echinococcus granulosus (tapeworm))
- Keratocyst (in the jaws, these can appear solitary or associated with the Gorlin-Goltz or Nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome. The latest World Health Organization classification considers Keratocysts as tumors rather than cysts)
- Liver cystic disease
- Meibomian cyst (eyelid)
- Mucoid cyst (ganglion cysts of the digits)
- Nabothian cyst (cervix)
- Ovarian cyst (ovaries, functional and pathological)
- Paratubal cyst (fallopian tube)
- Periapical cyst (The periapical cyst, otherwise known as radicular cyst, is the most common odontogenic cyst.)
- Peritoneal cyst (lining of the abdominal cavity)
- Pilar cyst (cyst of the scalp)
- Pilonidal cyst (skin infection near tailbone)
- Renal cyst (kidneys)
- Polycystic ovary syndrome
- Pineal gland cyst
- Radicular cyst (associated with the roots of non-vital teeth, also known as Periapical cyst)
- Testical cyst
- Sebaceous cyst (sac below skin)
- Tarlov cyst (spine)
- Trichilemmal cyst - Same as a pilar cyst. A familial cyst of the scalp.
- Vocal fold cyst
Benign vs malignant
Most cysts in the body are benign (functional), the result of plugged ducts or other natural body outlets for secretions. However, a few are tumors or are produced within tumors, and are potentially malignant:
Related structures
A pseudocyst is collection without a distinct membrane.
A syrinx in the spinal cord or brainstem is sometimes inaccurately referred to as a cyst.
References
External links
Pathology: Tumor, Neoplasm, Cancer, and Oncology (C00-D48, 140-239) |
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Conditions |
Benign tumors
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Hyperplasia · Cyst · Pseudocyst · Hamartoma
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Malignant progression
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Topography
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Head/Neck ( Oral, Nasopharyngeal) · Digestive system · Respiratory system · Bone · Skin · Blood · Urogenital · Nervous system · Endocrine system
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Histology
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Other
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Precancerous condition · Paraneoplastic syndrome
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Staging/grading |
TNM · Ann Arbor · Prostate cancer staging · Gleason Grading System · Dukes classification
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Carcinogenesis |
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Misc. |
Research · List of oncology-related terms
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Health science - Medicine - Cystic diseases |
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Respiratory system |
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Skin |
Adenoid cystic carcinoma · Fibrocystic breast diseaese
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Musculoskeletal system |
Cystic hygroma
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Digestive system |
liver: Polycystic liver disease · Congenital hepatic fibrosis · Peliosis hepatis
bile duct: Biliary hamartomas · Caroli disease · Choledochal cysts · Bile duct hamartoma
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Nervous system |
Cystic leukoencephalopathy
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Genitourinary system |
Polycystic kidney disease (Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney, Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney) · Medullary cystic kidney disease (Nephronophthisis) · Congenital cystic dysplasia
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Other conditions |
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