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Bartholin's Cyst

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Bartholin's glands are a pair of glands, about the size of a pea, whose secretions maintain the moisture of the vestibular surface of the vagina. They are at about the 4 o'clock and 8 o'clock position of the vestibule and normally cannot be palpated. Damage or infection of the ostium of the duct causes blockage and a cyst occurs that may become infected.

Caspar Bartholin was born in Copenhagen in 1655. He came from an eminent family and started his medical studies in 1671 at the age of 16. In 1674, at the age of 19, the King appointed him as Professor of Philosophy. He described the glands that bear his name in 1677 and died in 1738.

Epidemiology

Cysts or abscesses are usually unilateral. They occur in about 2% of women. Abscesses are probably about 3 times as common as cysts. The commonest age of presentation is in the 20s.
If they present after the age of 40 a malignant cause must be considered, although it is rare. Small cysts may be asymptomatic and so figures of incidence are imprecise.

Risk factors

  • They usually occur in women who are nulliparous or of low parity.
  • It is said that the risk factors are as for the risks of sexually transmitted infections, but as will be discussed below, the incidence of Neisseria gonorrhoea in cultures is very much lower than was originally thought.
History
  • Onset is rapid over a matter of days or even hours.
  • There is initially labial oedema before a swelling forms.
  • The swelling may be very painful and there is superficial dyspareunia.
  • If the cyst or abscess bursts spontaneously there is sudden relief of pain.
  • Small cysts may be asymptomatic and discovered incidentally, for example when performing a routine cervical smear.
Examination
  • The patient's gait is a wide-legged swagger.
  • There is usually a unilateral labial mass that may be as large as a hen's egg; it may be soft and fluctuant, or tense and hard.
  • Inguinal nodes may be palpable if it is infected and there may be fever, but this affects fewer than a third.
  • If the cyst or abscess bursts, there may be little to find.
Investigations

A swab should be taken from the contents of the cyst; often the organisms that are cultured, even from the contents of an abscess, are skin commensals rather than pathogens.

Infecting organisms

There is remarkably little literature on organisms grown from these abscesses.
A wide variety of organisms have been reported, but Chlamydia trachomatis seems to be growing in importance, perhaps as appropriate culture techniques are used more often.

  • Most infections seem to be by a single organism with a predominance of anaerobic bacteria.1 Of the 28 cases from North London with 25 cultures, no mention is made of gonococcus.
  • Gonococcus is mentioned in an American paper,2 but not with the frequency that textbooks seem to suggest.
  • A series from Japan showed 219 cultures from 224 cases and gonococcus was not mentioned.3
  • A Dutch study found gonococcus in 4 of 77 patients.4
  • An American study grew flora from 24 of 34 abscesses (71%) and of these 4 were gonococci.5 These figures belie the statement that "N. gonorrhoea is the most commonly cultured organism, reported in up to 80% of abscesses".6
  • A mini-meta-analysis of the 4 series in which numbers were given shows 365 patients with 331 positive cultures of which 8 were for N. gonorrhoea. This means that culture was positive in 90.7% but the gonococcus was isolated in 2.4% of cultures from 2.2% of patients.

The true frequency of gonococcus in Bartholin's abscesses may vary significantly between countries.

Differential diagnosis
Management
  • If the cyst is small and not causing a problem no action should be taken. The exception is in patients over 40 years of age in whom some suggest it should be excised. Histology must be obtained to exclude malignancy.
  • If there are no features of infection, antibiotics are not required and culture is usually sterile.
  • Simple incision of the cyst often results in recurrence and is not recommended.
  • Marsupialisation has been the definitive procedure of choice for many years and many gynaecologists still regard it as the best technique.
    • It can be performed under local anaesthesia although general anaesthetic is often used.
    • A vertical elliptical incision is made just inside or just outside the hymenal ring.
    • An oval wedge of skin from the vulva and cyst wall is removed.
    • Loculations are broken down with the gloved finger and the cyst wall is sewn to the adjacent skin using interrupted sutures.
    • A large cyst may be packed with ribbon gauze in flavine. The cyst is laid open and will shrink and epithelialise over the next 7 to 14 days. This prevents recurrence.
  • A more recent technique that is gaining popularity is the Word catheter.
    • After the usual preparation and infiltration with local anaesthetic, a stab is made into the cyst, 1 to 1½cms deep.
    • An instrument is used to break up loculations and after the cyst has been drained the Word catheter is passed into it; this is a small rubber catheter with an inflatable tip.
    • The balloon is inflated with water or lubricating gel as it holds its pressure better than air and the other end is passed into the vagina.
    • The catheter is left in situ for up to 4 weeks for complete epithelialisation of the new tract.
    • The catheter is removed by deflating the balloon, and over time the resulting orifice will decrease in size and become unnoticeable. Recent research at St. Georges in London found it to be safe and effective alternative to marsupialisation.7
  • Other techniques include incision and curettage of the cavity, application of silver nitrate to the abscess cavity or use of a carbon dioxide laser. All these techniques are less popular.
  • Complete excision of the gland should be avoided unless malignancy is suspected. This can cause considerable blood loss and should be performed in an operating theatre. Bartholin gland cancer is exceedingly rare in all women, including postmenopausal women. There is little evidence to justify excision. Drainage and selective biopsy may be sufficient as initial management.8
  • If antibiotics are required, metronidazole in combination with amoxicillin is appropriate.


Document references
  1. Wren MW; Bacteriological findings in cultures of clinical material from Bartholin's abscess. J Clin Pathol. 1977 Nov;30(11):1025-7. [abstract]
  2. Brook I; Aerobic and anaerobic microbiology of Bartholin's abscess. Surg Gynecol Obstet. 1989 Jul;169(1):32-4. [abstract]
  3. Tanaka K, Mikamo H, Ninomiya M, et al; Microbiology of Bartholin's gland abscess in Japan. J Clin Microbiol. 2005 Aug;43(8):4258-61. [abstract]
  4. Bleker OP, Smalbraak DJ, Schutte MF; Bartholin's abscess: the role of Chlamydia trachomatis. Genitourin Med. 1990 Feb;66(1):24-5. [abstract]
  5. Lee YH, Rankin JS, Alpert S, et al; Microbiological investigation of Bartholin's gland abscesses and cysts. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1977 Sep 15;129(2):150-3. [abstract]
  6. Howard A Blumstein, Bartholin Gland Diseases, eMedicine 2005
  7. Haider Z, Condous G, Kirk E, et al; The simple outpatient management of Bartholin's abscess using the Word catheter: a preliminary study. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol. 2007 Apr;47(2):137-40. [abstract]
  8. Visco AG, Del Priore G; Postmenopausal bartholin gland enlargement: a hospital-based cancer risk assessment. Obstet Gynecol. 1996 Feb;87(2):286-90. [abstract]

Internet and further reading Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Hayley Willacy for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2007.
DocID: 1846
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp1763
Last Updated: 18 Nov 2007
Review Date: 17 Nov 2009

The authors and editors of this article are employed to create accurate and up to date content reflecting reliable research evidence, guidance and best clinical practice. They are free from any commercial conflicts of interest. Find out more about updating.

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