Are there malignant bone cysts?

Bone cysts are usually benign tumors and rarely malignant, and can be treated conservatively if they are small. Surgical treatment is required for larger ones.
Most patients are found to have bone cysts unintentionally, and a benign occupancy in the bone area is discovered by chance. And the vast majority of bone cysts can be treated conservatively with observation. For a small number of bone cysts with significantly larger symptoms, surgical scraping and bone grafting can be used.
When the bone cyst is small and occupied, conservative observation can be taken, and usually there is no rapid progression in a short period of time. However, when the bone cyst increases in size and is accompanied by pain and discomfort, then surgical treatment in addition to conservative treatment can be considered. The purpose of surgery is to scrape the cyst wall of the bone cyst and to transplant the bone cyst after scraping.
When bone cysts appear, patients should actively carry out related treatment. If the area of bone cysts is not large, conservative treatment can be carried out in general. If the size of the cyst is large, the patient should undergo surgical treatment.