Abstract

Abstract Owing to the improvement in obstetric ultrasound imaging, prenatal diagnosis of ovarian masses has increased considerably. Fetal ovarian cysts can be suspected when an ultrasound scan shows intra-abdominal structures in female fetuses in the presence of normal bowel and urinary structures. The most common complication is the adnexal torsion, causing partial or complete strangulation of blood supply via ovarian vessels, leading ovarian ischemia, or necrosis. Current information regarding the treatment of fetal ovarian cysts is based on personal experiences and some case series. The management is controversial, characterized by dissimilar approaches, such as “wait and see”, prenatal or postnatal aspiration, or neonatal surgery. In more than half of the cases, spontaneous regression occurs in the prenatal or postnatal period, probably due to the small size and simple aspect. Large cysts may cause both local effects (adnexal torsion, ovarian autoamputation), and distant effects (intestinal and urinary obstruction, adhesion with adjacent organs, abdominal and thoracic mass effect, pulmonary hypoplasia, hemoperitoneum, ascites, polyhyramniosis). In the absence of accurate guidelines for management, we must start with the development of more accurate methods for diagnosing associated complications such as torsion. This case report describes the role of three-dimensional (3-D) ultrasonography as potential diagnostic method for ruling out adnexal torsion when an ovarian cyst is present.

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