Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello! I am going to assume that this is a skin lump. There is an unknown here; we don't know whether this lump is a) a cyst or b) for example, a cancer or lymph node with cystic areas. The only way to properly find out would be to remove and sample it. Biopsies of various kinds may also provide clues.
So: assuming that it is a) a cyst, removing it will carry some risk but potentially have the advantage of the cyst being gone. If you leave it there, you may still not 100% know that it is safe to leave. It may develop in a negative way, or grow bigger until it catches on things, or it may remain as it is.
If it turns out to be - say, a cancer - leaving it there may be a bad thing because you would still not know that the cancer was there. And removing it may solve the problem, or it may indicate that further treatment is needed, or, in some situations, that the problem couldn't simply be taken away.
You could draw this out as a tree of possible paths, but for me, if the anaesthetic risk was relatively low, then investigating and finding out what the lumps identity is, possibly through removal, would be my choice based on what I can see.
However this is a decision better talked over with your vet, who can feel the size of the lump and the local lymph nodes etc and therefore has more information on which to base this multifactorial decision.
I hope that that helps.
Report