• Working Hours: 05.00PM - 09.00PM

SEBACEOUS CYST SURGERY

About Sebaceous Cyst Surgery

Sebaceous cyst surgery is performed to remove a noncancerous lump formed due to blocked sebaceous glands. The procedure can be done through minor excision or drainage techniques. Surgical removal relieves discomfort, prevents infection, and avoids recurrence. Minimally invasive approaches offer faster recovery, minimal scarring, and improved cosmetic results. Early intervention ensures better outcomes, reduces complications, and restores normal skin appearance, providing patients with comfort, confidence, and long-term relief.

Types of Sebaceous Cyst Surgery

Sebaceous cysts can be treated through simple excision, minimal incision removal, or drainage. The choice depends on cyst size, location, and infection. Surgical removal ensures complete elimination, prevents recurrence, reduces infection risk, and provides better cosmetic results with minimal scarring.

 

Free Fibula Osteocutaenous Flap FFOCF:

What Is a Free Fibula Osteocutaneous Flap?

  • The fibula is the smaller bone in your lower leg (below the knee). You don’t need the entire
    bone to walk normally—so a portion of it can be used safely.
  • “Osteo” means bone, and “cutaneous” means skin.
  • This flap includes a segment of bone, along with skin and its blood vessels from the leg.

Causes Requiring Sebaceous Cyst Surgery

Sebaceous cyst surgery is required when the cyst becomes painful, infected, inflamed, or rapidly enlarging. Other reasons include recurrence, cosmetic concerns, or interference with daily activities, ensuring relief, preventing complications, and restoring normal skin appearance.

FAQs:

Relieves pain, treats infection, prevents recurrence, reduces inflammation, restores normal skin appearance.

A sebaceous cyst is a noncancerous, slow-growing lump under the skin, formed when a sebaceous gland becomes blocked, often containing oily or cheesy material.

Surgery is recommended for painful, infected, inflamed, rapidly growing, or recurrent cysts to prevent complications, discomfort, and improve cosmetic appearance.

Surgery involves minor excision or drainage of the cyst under local anesthesia, ensuring complete removal and minimal scarring.

Risks include infection, bleeding, scarring, recurrence, or delayed healing, but complications are rare with proper surgical care.

Recurrence is rare if the cyst is completely removed, but incomplete excision or infection may lead to future cyst formation.