Chronic Bartholin Abscess and Cysts - My Experience

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After roughly 5 years of experience with these beasts I opted to have my gland removed. I feel as though I've been through hell and back and almost feel a sense of obligation to share my story to those who may be going through the same thing. I know I wanted to know everything about them, so the least I can do is contribute my knowledge of the topic.

*I am NOT a medical professional and I am not dishing out medical advice, just sharing an experience*

I got my first abscess towards the end of my senior year of college. I'm now 27. I had the abscess drained by OB and it did not reappear until several years later. And guess when it decided to return? My honeymoon. My honeymoon was completely ruined. We were in the Dominican Republic and I noticed it starting to swell up the morning after we arrived. By that afternoon I was already starting to feel sluggish and almost like I had the flu. By the third day I was in bed with a 102 degree fever. I was too embarrassed and nervous to see an actual doctor in the Dominican so we went to the resort clinic and I faked a sinus infection knowing they would give me antibiotics. The antibiotics did not help (cephalexin) and I still had several days until I could get a flight back to the states. I writhed in pain for days, I didn't sleep for 3 days straight. I made a half-assed attempt at popping it WITH A NEEDLE. That is what desperation will do to you! The pain was so bad I had to stop and LAY DOWN IN THE AIRPORT when we were trying to get home. Do you know how disgusting and humiliating it is to lay down on the ground in an airport? I refused to get help until we got home. There is just something about getting cut open by someone you don't know in an unfamiliar place that is just unsettling...I cried for the entire day during the course of our 2 flights home. My husband rushed me to the ER as soon as we landed. The doctor lanced the abscess and gave me a word catheter. I felt amazing afterwards. It hurt to sit, but I could work from home and within a week I was back to normal. Story should end there with a happy ending, right?

Wrong.

Fast forward to a few months later and it's back. I tried the sitz baths, but it did not change. When it got big enough and I started to feel that awful flu-ish feeling, I saw my OB GYN who once again lanced it and inserted a catheter. Went home, did my sitz baths, back to normal in a week...

Fast foward another two months and I feel another one coming on. Once again, I got the catheter. Except this time my OB stated she made a larger incision than before. It hurt extremely bad this time. I cried at the pharmacy waiting for my pain meds and cephalexin. I almost couldn't make the drive home. That night, I got chills and noticed I was bleeding way more than normal. I also developed another high fever. By that time I was a veteran with the word catheter so I knew something was wrong. Me and my husband called local hospitals trying to figure out how to classify "too much blood loss". I toughed it out and tried to sleep through the night. I was sure it was infected and that it was bleeding too much. 3 days of bleeding with chills and fever, puss burst through the catheter, almost as if it had re-burst again after it was lanced. It was a horrible, horrible experience.

Later that winter it came back once again...like clockwork, I swear. This time I had a marsupilaization. The procedure seemed almost TOO good to be true. I felt way better afterwards than when I had the catheters. We even went out to eat that night! This blissful feeling lasted for 3 whole months! I know it seems odd, but when my husband and I were intimate after the incision healed and the stitches dissolved, it was better than it was before this whole mess started!

Too good to be true, you say? You are correct.

Here we are...summertime, a little over a year after my honeymoon disaster. On a holiday weekend I felt it coming back. I went and saw my OB and she said she would lance and insert a catheter. At that point, I finally took control of what I thought should be done and declined the catheter. I requested a lancing instead because at that point - I already know it will come back, so why go through the extra pain of the catheter? She lances it, it got infected (despite the antibiotics) and re-burst again a few days later. Same fever, same pain, no sleeping, etc. I cried once again, but this time not just because it hurt, but because I felt broken. I felt like it had officially taken over my life.

Before I left my OB's office the day I got it lanced again, we talked about a more permanent solution. I mentioned removing the gland entirely (because like you people, I troll the internet looking for all possible solutions to this thing) and she shrugged her shoulders and gave me an uneasy look suggesting that removing the gland was not something she would advise. 

The fact that she wouldn't even hear it out made me feel a bit less comfortable with her even though she had been my OB for 14 years! I once again took to google and searched for the BEST gynecological surgeon in my area. I settled on one and set an appointment for a second opinion. My visit with her was borderline inspiring. She was so confident, she expained that I was considered an ideal candidate for the surgery and even went so far as to draw pictures of the actual procedure for me. It sounds weird, I know, but it helped. She sent me on my way and said to call back when I was ready. I called back two months later when I just barely felt another abscess coming on and she put me on the surgery calendar. I met with her the night before and even sat down with the anesthesiologist to get a very clear picture of how everything the next day would run. The surgery went great. I'm 3 weeks post-op and feeling really well. There is still a little pain, but definitely no bleeding. I'm used to healing really quickly so I keep expecting it to not hurt at all, but that is just unrealistic considering a gland was removed from my body. 

I'm not going to tell anyone on here to go out and do the surgery. It is up to you.

Below is what did not work for me. 

Sitz baths

Tea tree oil

Epsom salts

Silicia

Serrapeptase

Probiotics (these are good for you anyway)

Drawing salves

Massaging the area

Steam/warm compresses

Ice packs

Antibiotics

Calamine lotion

The Bartholin Cyst Miracle e-book

Here is a little procedure cheat-sheet for those who may be unfamiliar:

Lancing - the area is numbed with a topical anesthetic, again with local anesthetic and a small incision is made into the abscess/cyst to allow the built up puss to drain. **soooo gross**

Word Catheter - incision is made similiar to the above, except a small tube with a balloon on the end is inserted into the hole. This allows the hole to remain open and encourages the cyst to continue to drain. My first doctor said the catheter should stay in place for a few days. The internet told me 4 weeks. My second doctor that performed my excision also said it should have stayed in for at least a few weeks.

Marsupilization - incision is made per the above and instead stitched open to allow the hole to remain open. From what I've heard, this has been a permanent solution for some! Not for me, but I definitely preferred it over the catheter.

Gland Excision - exactly that. The entire gland is removed. Recovery time is around 6 weeks, pain is mild, I was also warned that disfigurement is a possibility, but that was not the case for me. Yes, I've looked at it. 

It may be too early to tell if my surgery has a good prognosis, however, my doctor did say she was able to remove almost all of the gland. It is important to know that the gland is so small and the area is so vascular, that it can sometimes be difficult for the surgeon to remove the entire mechanism. Understanding how much was removed will help you better figure out your chance for reccurrence. 

Well friends, I wish everyone on here the best of luck with this awful condition. It blows my mind that this disorder doesn't get a whole lot of attention considering how life altering it really can be. I leave you with just a few of my mantras for battling this crap: you are not alone, you are not broken, and you are not crazy. Do your research, don't be afraid to get second opinions and do what you feel is best for your body and your well being. 

 

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  • Posted

    Wow I was put under for this procedure. So amazing lots of luck!

    I cannot imagine NOT being put under, but sounds like it will be ok. 

    • Posted

      I've heard others were put under for the marsupialization too. I probably would have as well if it was suggested by my doc!
  • Posted

    Megan, thanks for sharing.  I think you give us all hope.  My stories are SO like yours.  My first cyst was on our dream trip to Italy.  We had to cut our trip short and like you, I flew from Italy to the US crying the whole time and went straight to the ER to have it lanced.  We did the Word catheter twice and then the Marsupulization, which i had two weeks ago.  Hoping for the best with it.  I will consider "the big" surgery if this doesn't work.  I have one of the best OBGYN's and he said he wouldn't do the surgery because it's a "risky" surgery( because of the arteries attached to the gland).  He did say he would refer me to a oncologist surgeon who does them.  He only considers this as the lastr resort after all the other steps...catherer, marsupulization then removal.  Uggh!!  But I'm feeling hopeful with the Marsupulization.  smile
    • Posted

      So sorry to hear about your dream trip being cut short. I feel for you! It sounds like you are in really good care with your existing doctor though. Keep us posted on how you are doing and I'll definitely be praying that your marsupialization is the last treatment you have to endure!
    • Posted

      Saw my doctor today for my two week follow up after the marsupialization. Im feeling like I'm not healing as fast as I expected but he said I'm healing well. I asked him about in how many of his patients does he see a reoccurrence after this procedure. He said not many...about one out of ten or fifteen. I thought I'd share this because I felt like after looking online, it seemed like more. I feel hopeful. He said I should be back to normal in a couple weeks. Fingers crossed!!
    • Posted

      Hi Megan

      i read your story, i know how it could be as i suffered from this couple times. i have a question, many say that the gland removal will cause extreme dryness in the woman's body, did it happen to you after your removal? do you have this dryness problem? no problem in sex?

      I am really glad for you that you are done with this pain forever smile

    • Posted

      Hi Fatemeh!

      I apologize for the delayed response. It's been a crazy few days. I sure hope I'm done with this forever, but I know how stubborn these things are. For now I'm just enjoying every pain free second I have.

      As for the dryness, I kind of already suffered from that. It started as soon as I started taking birth control when I was 16 and never really resolved itself, even though I've been off of it for about 5 years. I haven't noticed it being any worse since the surgery.

      Hope this helps!

      -Megan

    • Posted

      mary all my doctors told me the same thing 1 to 10 has a recurence so good luck to you . i am sure its over for you .relax and enjoy bc free life later . and update to give us rest courage :D

       

  • Posted

    I wish I had had a positive experience with my bartholin gland excision. What a nightmare and it's not even over yet! I got my first bartholin gland cyst at age 39 this past April. Out of nowhere I felt a golf ball sized lump on what I thought was my right perineal muscle. It was uncomfortable but not painful to sit. I immediately called my gynecologist's office and made an appointment with the first available dr. I got in that afternoon. The dr felt it and assumed it was a run of the mill bartholin cyst. But no... Not mine. As soon as she finally felt like she could get deep enough inside and lanced it, she found that it was filled with blood, "old blood", and blood clots! She had the assistant go and get another one of the drs for a consult. Both drs asked me if I had had any recent trauma that could have caused it. Nope. They were both baffled by the presentation of the cyst and said they had never had one like this before. Figures!

    She proceeded to squeeze and squeeze until she felt she got it all out. Before she left the room for me to get dressed, she warned me that there was a lot of blood. She was t kidding! It looked like a crime scene in there...a puddle of blood under me, blood spatters all over the floor that I had to dodge to get me clothes. It freaked me out a bit. She gave me a script for an antibiotic and sent me on my way. I had no issues post procedure besides bruising from all of the pushing, pulling and squeezing.

    Then the end August rolls around and I feel it there again. It was a Sunday so I waited until the next day and then called for an appointment. I asked for the same dr given the atypicality of my previous cyst but unfortunately that dr had moved out of state. The scheduled me with another dr for later that day. I explained what happened in April. She said until a couple months ago she would've said she had never seen anything like that before but she has just had another patient with a similar cyst. I felt good about this this time...until she started trying to find a way to get to the cyst to lance and drain it. She ended up needing to have another dr come in to consult. First HE was an observer over suggestions. Next thing I know they've both got their hands in there - one pulling and holding the cyst in place and the other lancing, draining and squeezing. Needlesstosay, neither of them had seen one like mine before either. They both said that if it came back, the next step would be to have it surgically removed in the operating room. When I was packing up to leave the room this time, no evidence of any crime scene! When I got home from the office, I checked the area and still felt like the cyst was still there. I chalked it up to swelling from all of the maniplation of the area but when it didn't go down after several days and because I had discomfort ever since the procedure, I scheduled a follow up with the same dr (still there! :-)

    At the follow up, she told me she felt it was time to have it removed surgically because she had done all that could be done with it in the office. She brought in that other dr again to confirm. Between then and my surgery date 10/7/15) things were uneventful. The cyst was there but not sore, not painful, etc.

    The day of the surgery went fine. I wasn't worried. I figured the last 2 procedures were a piece of cake. I was sore that first day but nothing crazy. I couldn't sit down fully - had to lean to the left to avoid putting pressure on that right side. I took ibuprofen for the pain - trying to avoid filling the script for Percocet. The next day though, I needed more. I had someone fill my script for me and pick up supplies since I could t drive myself (can't sit, can't drive a car). I took one Percocet and then ended up back on the ibuprofen. The Percocet did nothing for the pain for me. The ibuprofen worked fine. I stretched out how much and how offen I took them for as long as I could. I didn't want to overload myself on it. But day to day, I felt worse. It always felt damp down there no matter how I tried to take care of it. Sitz baths were ok but only provided temporary relief and were too much work in my opinion (because of having to clean it between each use and because of having to clean up my whole bathroom after it overflowed one time!). I still did them though but I preferred standing long hot showers.

    Two days after surgery, the office called to check on me when I told them about the discomfort, not being able to sit or drive, and that it now felt like I had three lumps in that area instead of one, they immediately moved up my follow up appointment to today. Though bruising and swelling was decreasing throughout the day, the incision site was becoming more evident and by day 4 post op, it was raw and infected. When I saw the surgeon this afternoon, she confirmed infection and said that my incision had opened. She took a culture (causing me to cringe) and called in that other de for a consult. They decided no packing was needed but advised that I continue sitz baths twice a day and start placing paper towels soaked in peroxide on the area three times a day (ouch!). She gave me a script for an antibiotic for the infection and I go back again on Thursday. They put me out of work for 2 weeks. I had really thought that I would've been able to go back to work last Friday. As a counselor, I really don't like to miss seeing my patients for that long.

    I'm really hoping the healing process starts soon and that I can re-enter society in a couple days. This experience has been so frustrating!

  • Posted

    I should probably clarify from my previous post that I had the entire gland removed, not just the cyst.
    • Posted

      I'm sorry to hear your experience was so horrible. Luckily they were able to catch your infection rather quickly. Was your incision stitched?
    • Posted

      No. They left it open. Didn't even pack it. I'm worried about the gaping hole at the moment but we'll see...
    • Posted

      I think you're smart to keep a close eye on it. Not sure what is considered the "norm" for the incision, but I had many dissolvable stitches. I believe my doctor said she placed one for every millimeter.
  • Posted

    I'm six week post Marsupialization and starting to feel back to normal. The recovery was longer than expected but I had a little trouble with the stitches.  Hoping this works at least for a while. Ladies, just remember it's your body and please use your judgement on what you need and what you can't tolerate.  On my third accessed cyst my doctor wanted to try the Word catheter for the second time.  I insisted we move on to the Marsupialization. I don't want this running my life .  Feeling better than I have felt in two months.  Thankful.

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