My big fat Greek tumor

Posted on Monday, March 03, 2008 2:00 AM PT

By Kara Chalmers

When my gynecologist told me that what he felt on my left ovary was most likely a teratoma, I immediately thought of “My Big Fat Greek Wedding.” Remember the scene where Aunt Voula talks about a lump on her neck that contained teeth and a spinal cord? Well, she was talking about a teratoma, which happens to be Greek for “monster tumor.” In the movie, she actually says, “inside the lump was my twin.”

Ew. How gross. But how fascinating! I was almost embarrassed to tell my husband. But it turned out he was as enthralled as I was by the idea of a tumor that was brimming with random body parts. (My husband later begged my surgeon to keep my teratoma after removing it, so that he could study it more closely – in the name of “psychological closure.” The surgeon declined.)

That night, we compulsively surfed the Web for photographs, and let me tell you, teeth and spinal cords hardly scratch the surface. Teratomas (a.k.a. dermoid cysts) are made of germ cells that try to begin the process of making new humans, according to my gynecologist, Dr. Kyle L. Garner, who’s based in Sarasota, Fla. While germ cells that become eggs can be fertilized to become babies, germ cells that become teratomas, for reasons that are yet unknown, grow unregulated, he said. That’s why teratomas can have hair, eyeballs, brain matter, lung matter, skin, even bone.

You can be born with a teratoma, but most often, these masses aren’t detected until a woman’s reproductive years – often during pregnancy, since that’s when a woman would undergo an ultrasound, which could pick up a teratoma. Of the roughly 22,000 new cases of ovarian cancer diagnosed each year in the United States, about 15 to 25 percent are teratomas.

Among the photographs we found online was a particularly mesmerizing image of a red blob with a perfect, gleaming white molar protruding from its surface. But the funniest picture was that of a teratoma that someone had knitted. It was reddish and about the size and shape of a large cantaloupe, with yarn hair, teeth, hands and an eyeball – all on strings so that they could be pulled out or stuffed back inside.

Wow, I thought, as I wondered how much a monster tumor could weigh. Maybe I was actually five pounds skinnier!

I have to mention, too, that while I was alternately horrified and awestruck, the main feeling I experienced that night was relief, since I found out that while bizarre, ovarian teratomas are usually benign. From the very first “hmmmmm” that Dr. Garner had uttered upon feeling the 6-centimeter solid mass during a routine examination, I had been terrified of ovarian cancer. In fact, when I called my husband after leaving the office, I had burst into tears and wailed, “He found a lump!” and almost T-boned another car in my hysteria.

Of course, as Dr. Garner often repeated, there was no way to know for sure what the lump was until he was holding it in his hands. And regardless of whether or not they are cancerous, teratomas can cause ovaries to twist (not a good thing since that limits the blood supply) and they can rupture. So I scheduled surgery to remove the mass for as soon as possible and hoped and prayed Dr. Garner’s diagnosis was right. It was, and the mass was non-cancerous.

As far as teratomas go, mine looked pretty tame, according to Dr. Garner. “Like a big hairball soaked in pus,” he said matter-of-factly, as I gagged in his office. However, from a microscopic standpoint, my teratoma contained all sorts of things in addition to hair and the “yellowish, pasty, sebaceous material” that the pathology report referenced. There was also skin, sweat glands, lung tissue and cartilage, for example.

The one unfortunate thing – my teratoma’s removal did not result in a sudden drastic weight loss, as hoped. Maybe if it had just had some teeth…

Comments

How cool!  That doctor could have at least taken some pictures for you!
I had one of these but did't get it treated until it was the size of a honeydew melon.  I only went to the doctor becuase I was having the worst pain of my life.  I had to have major surgery to remove it and it did end up twisting my ovary and the doctor had to remove that as well.
The link to the knitted teratoma was a hoot.  It's actually called "Baby's First Teratoma."  If you have to have "something" wrong, I guess you might as well have something interesting and non-lethal.  

Thanks for the laugh.  I hope you are all better now. :)
Yeah, I had one about 20 years ago, I had a positive pregancy test 7 months prior to the diagnosis of my dermoid cyst.  But two weeks after the EPT test, I had one heck of a menstrual cycle.  I truly believe that dermoid cyst was related to the positive pregnancy test. I had a lot of posterior lower back pain, my cyst was posterior on the ovary. I had an epidural for the surgery, and saw bascially a lemon size pus blob on the tray.  That was interesting-thank goodness I had worked in the OR when I was in the Navy.  Good story though-I truly related to the story.
In 1977, two days after I graduated from college, I had a benign dermoid ovarian cyst removed. It was the size of an orange (and probably accounted for my weight going up about two pounds or so), and enveloped my right ovary, so the surgeon took out that ovary, along with my appendix.
My mom, a former OB-GYN, told me about the dermoid aspects of these cysts, such as hair, teeth, etc.
These cysts remind us that what happens during reproduction, or when there is no reproduction, is often a mystery. Why these develop in the absence of sperm or pregnancy-related hormones is a greater mystery, and pretty awe-inspiring.
You don't read about teratomas very often.  I had the same thing.  Mine was close to 2 pounds and was taken out after my baby boy by c-section.  My stomach is now flatter than before I was pregnant.  I too gagged when the doctor told me what was in it.
I was floored to see some attention given to teratomas...and read about other women who have had one!  I had a large teratoma removed last winter.  I went to the ER with horrific abdominal pain due to the teratoma causing torsion of my ovary and ovarian ligament.  At first the doctor said that they found a "large mass" in my abdomen and that it could very well be cancer.  Not what a college junior wants to hear.  However, during my hospital admission they discovered that it was a teratoma and slated me for surgery.  That thing was a whopper...a bit larger than a softball.  Because I work in a histology lab, I requested to take the specimen for further study.  That puppy had hair, bone, a lot of sebaceous "junk"...and a heart.  I can only wonder if it was beating.  On the down side, I'm down one ovary and Fallopian tube.  On the bright side, I'm free of pain, down a couple of pounds, voted "researcher with the coolest specimen" in my lab, and, best of all, my psoriasis has improved tremendously!
Hmmm ... what is it about doctors not letting you see the spare parts they remove?  Heck, even automotive repairment save you every last nut and bolt and proudly display them when you come to pick up your car after servicing!  I had a liver transplant five years ago, and asked if they'd save my liver so I could look at it.  Barring that, I asked if they couldn't just take a picture.  It seems that it just "isn't done" anymore. Gone are the days when a kid could take his tonsils in a bottle into school for show and tell.
I had a benign tumor larger than a football removed last year -- a "serous cystadenoma."  Inside was a smaller teratoma. When my dad took my pets to be boarded for my hospital stay, the vets said that teratomas happen in dogs and cats, and are filled with fur, whiskers and claws.

The worst part of the ordeal was that I had to consent to a complete hysterectomy, but it didn't come to that.  I have a vertical seven to eight-inch scar extending downward from my navel.  I did ask for a copy of the pathology report, which a few physicians in my family were strangely anxious to see.
Surgeons don't give  you the parts they remove because the resected specimens have to be completely examined by pathologists to ensure a correct diagnosis (that is...malignant or benign).  The specimens are treated with various hazardous chemicals during this process (formaldehyde, xylene, etc.) that could pose a danger if returned to the patient.  That's why, with very rare exceptions, surgically resected specimens cannot be returned to the patient.
I had 2 dermoid tumors removed 34 yrs. ago when I was 26.  One was the size of a grapefruit, and one was the size of an orange.  I had never heard of such a thing then, and am still amazed to find other women still having them!  At that time, we were just worried I'd have to have a hysterctomy, but my doctor was able to remove them, and leave the ovaries.
Ew.  Please let that be the end of your story.
I had one that was discovered when I was 18, it was huge, it covered my entire stomich area from chest to torso, and weight 19 pounds...and I just thought I was fat :) - when it was removed it had hair and teeth, we named it Charlie
Loved your story!








I also discovered I had one when I was just about to turn 21. The doctor allowed me to put off surgery until after finals. When all was said and done, the tumor weighed about 25 pounds. I had to have an ovary and fallopian tube removed. I gave mine a name also.. Georgina :)
Now that was really gross! And funny. And gross. I enjoyed it immensely!
I remember one episode of "Diagnosis X" where a thirteen year old girl showed up with mysterious symptoms, and it turns out to be a teratoma in the end. it was interestingf and somewhat freaky.
Get off the phone while you are driving! Have some gratitude for your life being spared!
I had bilateral dermoid cysts when I was 21 and lost one ovary and all but 1/15th of the other. That little piece kept working for a while but I became menopausal at 30. My sister had one in her 30s (after her kids thankfully) and my mother had one when she was in her 30s. Apparently, they run in families. I'd rather have inherited the genes for thinness, thank you very much.
My 2 year daughter is having a dermoid cyst removed from her eyebrow next week. Its only about 1/2 in in diameter from the outside.
Hopefully by doing this now, we aren't giving it the chance to grow into a tooth or a hair ball!
LOVE the story. I have intense curiosity about such things too! Definitely gonna google images for that one. I was just diagnosed with a large fibroid and am handling it with the same humor. His name is Freddie....I think I felt him kick the other day....and will find out soon what is to be done with him at the gynecologist's office.
I had one removed when I was 9 years old.  My doctors definitely had a challenge trying to explain what it was.  Also, they offered to let me take it home in a jar after I came out of surgery, but I declined.  Twelve years later, I sometimes wish I had accepted their offer!
wow!  it's nice to read stories from people who had the same experience.  mine was found during my pregnancy and i waited till i had the baby to have the surgery.  it got to 11cm and had teeth & bone.  what a painful experience to have after having a kid!  i lost an ovary but the baby was perfectly fine!
I, too, am (unappologetically) obsessed with pussey masses and smelly gross cysts. I blame it on being the granddaughter of a nurse who loves to tell about the man who burned his penis so badly, it had to be amputated and her friend who she treated for "jungle rot of the genitals. I had a small follicular cyst (about the size of a big green pea) removed from my arm pit and begged to see it once it was removed.  I had to laugh that I was completly grossed out by its looks and that it smelled like rotten flesh.  It was in my body for years and I named it Bob.  When it was gone I was sorta sad. I joked that it was my vestigal twin. I said that he had a bank account and had helped me with my taxes.  At parties I love when people have little gross skin or tissue stories.  I finally got one guy to show me his webbed toes.  I think a coffee table book on the subject would be fabulous!
Well...I posted a message earlier, but withheld the fact I, too, named my teratoma.  I had been operating under the pretense that perhaps I was a bit odd for naming it, but since everyone else is sharing...I named mine Danny the Dermoid.  Humor really does help you get through rough patches!!
Margaret Atwood, the award-winning Canadian writer, wrote a short story about a woman who thinks she's pregnant but turns out to have a cyst, complete with bone and tooth tissue, etc. She saves it in a jar, names it "Hairball," and when her married boyfriend dumps her, she covers the thing with chocolate and sends it to him and his wife in a fancy box like a truffle.
I had one removed last week in addition to something that my doctor couldn't identify inside my fallopian tube.  My doctor ended up removing the ovary and fallopian tube because it was damaged.  I think doctors should include sonograms and other similar testing to find these cysts.  Mine had been growing for years and if it had been caught earlier, I might not have lost the left half of my reproductive system.
Dear Anonymous,

Please let us know how your 2-year-old did after the surgery.

Interesting, scary and gross!but you were very lucky it wasn't that horrible ovarian cancer!
Mmm . . . teratoma . . .

Now this is an amazing write-up - A Riveting read
Thanks for the story. I've also had one removed from my ovary two years ago, and in the surgeon's report and in the control sonograms it looked like they got all of it away but now it's recurred. Has anyone had a recurring problem of a benign teratoma or should I be more worried?
In 1957 I was born with a teratoma the size of a volleyball.  The neurosurgeon my parents were referred to said I will operate at we have nothing to lose.  50 years later I am still around, have had surgery to remove 2 other teratomes (ovarian) and regard these things as a fact of life.
Hi-This is wonderful!!  If anybody has a teratoma that they would like to put up for adoption I am more than willing to become it's Mom.  I could even open a teratoma orphanage if I got enough.  So keep me in mind and send me your teratomas.  I will pay all postage.
If I had knowledge of one of these things inside of me, I'd finally lose some weight by loss of apetite !!
OMG!  You all sound like so much fun to party with!  If you like the really gross stuff, visit the Morse Museum in Philly, PA - I couldn't get enough of it!  I bought a box of books at an auction and in the bottom of the box was a Physician's Guide to Women dated 1908.  Talk about the gross and macabre!  
Even though this sounds gross and I don't want one of those, this was the funniest thing I've read in weeks!  I could read this kind of stuff all day at work!
Kat, No worries. I haad one on my left ovary and had to have it removed and less than a year later had one on my right ovary and had it removed.
I was totally grossed out by it in the beggining but then found it to be very interesting. Mine had bone, teeth, grease, and cartlidge. WOW!! I wish I would have named mine now :)
The museum in Philly is the Mutter Museum (not the Morse Museum) and is freakishly fascinating!  
Now why can't doctors look more into the beneficial aspects of teratomas or at least the nature of their cells? Like being able to regrow body parts for instance? Other species can do it - maybe this is the link!
ok glad to know i'm not the only one. i had a 28 lb one removed along with all of my reproductive organs. this was 7 years ago. my new husband was a little upset we couldnt have kids, but stuff happens. all the doctors and tests showed i was pregnant and for 6 months we believed that until i ended up in the er with swelling legs from the blood clots that had formed thanks to the cyst. i too think dr's should include ultrasounds in a yearly well woman physical to find all of these things. they figure mine had grown for at least 4 years and probably started out as a tubal pregnancy.
I was completely intrigued by this so I had to google it. Wow. Is all I have to say for some of the pictures. Some were really sad(like the ones with the babies) and some just plain grossed me the heck out. Bleh.
This is hilarious! I had a teratoma that my friends and I named Doug. He weighed a little over a pound and was bigger than my Dad's closed fist. Gross! My doctor thought for the longest time that I had appendicitis because I had so much pain on my right side. Well, it was just Doug. He was so big that he was pushing all my internal stuff up against each other. My doctor also had to remove my left fallopian tube because Doug had completely crushed. Doug was such a jerk.
Seems like this is an all woman's thing but I had a friend who developed a teratoma in his sac, it had hair and a tooth, lost one testicle as part of the surgery. It was malignant, but with treatment he lived about 30 more years.
why cant doctors use the same principal as teratomas to grow useful body parts for transplants?
My daughter had one of these disgusting things when she was 12 years old.  I hope word about their destruction doesn't leak out (no pun intended) to the anti-abortion people.  (I apologize, but it had to be said!!!)
Thad Beaumont had one removed from his brain that had an eye.
Do these only occur in reproductive tissue?


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Insights and ruminations on the strangeness of all things medical, pharmaceutical and biological from the twisted minds that brought you the bestsellers “Why Do Men Have Nipples?” and “Why Do Men Fall Asleep After Sex?”

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