Breast and Axilla Flashcards
What is Galactorrhea
the inappropriate discharge of milk-containing fluid, which is abnormal if it occurs 6 or more months after childbirth or cessation of breast feeding
Risk factors for breast cancer
affected mother or sister, biopsy showing atypical hyperplasia, increasing age, early menarche, late menopause, late or no pregnancies, and previous radiation to the chest wall
Redness of the breast
local infection or inflammatory carcinoma
Flattening of the breast
If it is normally convex, flattening suggests cancer
Asymmetry of directions in which nipples point
underlying cancer
Paget’s disease of the breast
Paget’s disease of the breastRash or ulceration of the nipples
Nipple retractions
Recent or fixed flattening or depression of the nipple`
Dimpling or retraction of the breasts in the “arms over head position”
underlying cancer. When a cancer or its associated fibrous strands are attached to both the skin and the fascia overlying the pectoral muscles, pectoral contraction can draw the skin inward, causing dimpling
Dimpling or retraction of the breasts in the “hands pressed against hips” position
may be associated with benign lesions such as post-traumatic fat necrosis or mammary duct ectasia, but they must always be further evaluated
Retraction of the nipple and areola in the “leaning Forward” position
underlying cancer. This position may reveal an asymmetry of the breast or nipple not otherwise visible
Mass attached to the ribs and intercostal muscles
A mobile mass that becomes fixed when the arm relaxes
mass attached to the pectoral fascia
A mobile mass that is fixed when the hand is pressed against the hip
thickening of the nipple and loss of elasticity
underlying cancer
Gynecomastia
firm disc of glandular enlargement that arises from an imbalance of estrogen and androgens, sometimes drug related. A hard, irregular, eccentric, or ulcerating nodule suggests breast cancer
Hidradenitis suppurativa
sweat gland infection in the axilla