Subcutaneous masses should be evaluated for duration, growth, depth, neurovascular proximity, and red-flag features (rapid enlargement, fixation, systemic symptoms). Imaging (ultrasound) is sometimes arranged before excision. Review references for lipoma and cyst excision in family medicine—such as concise procedural summaries in AAFP journals—align with careful dissection to remove the capsule when treating epidermal cysts to reduce recurrence.

Large lesions, intramuscular masses, or uncertain imaging may be referred to general surgery.

What This Service Includes

Preoperative clarity

Clinical photograph optional; mark side/location; discuss recurrence risk.

Dissection

Sharp/blunt tissue handling; hemostasis; specimen orientation if deep.

Closure

Dead space management; layered repair for larger defects.

What to Expect

1

Assessment

Mobility, transillumination clues, patient goals.

2

Excision

En-bloc tissue with capsule when treating cysts; send to pathology if policy dictates.

3

Recovery

Limit strenuous use of operative site; drain instructions if rare Penrose used.

Frequently Asked Questions

Cysts can recur if capsule fragments remain—re-excision is possible.

Office family medicine focuses on surgical excision; contouring devices are not routinely used.

Bleeding disorders and anticoagulants increase risk—disclosed before the procedure.

Depends on lesion type, size, and clinical certainty—non-excisional options discussed when appropriate.