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Point-of-Care Ultrasound Appearance of Cystic Ovarian Teratoma Causing Ovarian Torsion

Abstract

We present a case of ovarian torsion due to a nine-centimeter cystic ovarian teratoma diagnosed on transabdominal point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS). A 29-year-old female presented with abrupt onset of 10/10 left lower quadrant pain for one hour. She had a known left-sided ovarian cyst. Patient was normotensive, not tachycardic, and afebrile. Bimanual exam showed a seven-centimeter left, adnexal mass. POCUS revealed a nine-centimeter cystic structure in the left adnexa with a three-centimeter echogenic focus, consistent with a dermoid plug. A radiology-performed transvaginal ultrasound confirmed the left sided mass with absent blood flow. Emergent diagnostic laparoscopy showed the cyst was torsed twice and was found to contain adipose tissue and hair on pathologic evaluation consistent with a benign cystic teratoma. The patient did well postoperatively and was discharged the next day. Ovarian torsion is a gynecologic surgical emergency. The characteristic appearance of a cyst with “dermoid plug” in the appropriate clinical setting can lead to earlier diagnosis and treatment.

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