Dermoid cyst of ovary
Contents
Dermoid cyst arises from-
A. Germ cells arrested after the first meiotic division.
B. Stem cells
C. Blastomeres
D. Arrested growth of yolk sac derivatives
Most common malignancy seen in ovarian teratoma
A. Osteosarcoma
B. Adenocarcinoma
C. Squamous cell carcinoma
D. Melanoma
Best to diagnose teratoma is –
A. Sonography
B. Computed tomography
C. Rokitansky protuberance in macroscopy
D. Neovascularization in USG
Which of the following dermoid type is associated with hyperthyroidism
A. Monodermal teratomas
B. Immature teratomas
C. Mature cystic teratoma
D. Fetiform teratomas
All are true about Rokitansky’s protuberance except
A. Rare site of malignant transformation
B. Also called a dermoid plug
C. Solid tissue projection into the cyst
D. Covered by skin with sweat and sebaceous glands
All are ultrasound features of mature cystic teratoma except
A. Tip of the iceberg sign
B. Dot-dash sign
C. Palm tree-like protrusion
D. Comet tail appearance
In short
Sonographically, mature cystic teratomas may seem as purely or predominantly cystic, solid or a complex mass with high reflection and acoustic shadowing. The various signs are
- Tip of the iceberg sign
- Dot-dash sign
- Comet tail appearance
- Thin echo pat-tern” or “dense echo pattern”
- Shadowing echodensity (Rokitansky nodule or dermoid plug)
- Diffuse or regional high-amplitude echoes
- Fat-fluid or fluid-fluid level
- Floating balls sign