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Ovarian masses in the newborn.

Prenatal sonography uncovers many fetal ovarian masses that previously would have gone unrecognized. This challenges clinicians to learn the natural history of these asymptomatic lesions so as to provide the best care postnatally. Spontaneous resolution of simple ovarian cysts is expected by about 6 months of age, which is attributed to predicted changes in the postnatal hormonal milieu. After birth, levels of human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) and estrogen plummet. Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) rise until about 3 months of age and then fall as the "gonadostat" matures. Although symptomatic cysts demand intervention, simple asymptomatic cysts less than 5 cm in diameter should be left alone but reassessed sonographically. If simple cysts are larger than 5 cm in diameter the risk of torsion may be significant, and intervention often is advocated. However, the risk of torsion versus the likelihood of resolution is not well established. The therapeutic goal for a clinician managing a newborn with a simple ovarian cyst is to maximize ovarian salvage. Aspiration alone may be a reasonable option. The laparascopic approach to the neonatal ovarian cyst provides a view of both ovaries and allows aspiration, unroofing, cystectomy, or ovariectomy. The sonographically complex cyst usually represents adnexal torsion but could be a neoplasm and warrants intervention because the morbidity from untreated neonatal adnexal torsion can be significant beyond loss of the ovary (eg, hemorrhage, peritonitis, intestinal obstruction, or a wandering tumor).

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