Abstract
The vagina or intermediate organ of generation in the female, extending from the hymen to the cervix uteri may at any time become the seat of tumour growth although with much rarer frequency in comparison with the external genitalia on the one hand and internals on the other. Apart from such conditions as cystocele, rectocele, prolapsus uteri, inversio and polypus uteri, vaginal tumours may be divided into two main groups, simple and malignant, the former being again subdivided into fibrous and cystic tumours.
It is under the category of fibrous or more correctly fibro-myomatous growths that the following case comes to be included.