Breast - Benign Breast Lesions and Causes of Nipple Discharge Flashcards
Benign lumps - Fibroadenoma: features and treatment
Features
- Develop from a whole lobule
- Mobile, firm breast lumps (12% of all breast masses)
- No increase in risk of malignancy
Treatment
- If >3cm surgical excision is usual
- May be confused with Phyllodes tumour (very fast growing cystosarcoma) which needs rapid excision
Benign lumps - Breast cyst: features and treatment
Features
- 7% of all western ladies will present with a breast cyst
- Usually presents as smooth discrete lump (may be fluctuant)
- Small increased risk of breast cancer (especially if younger)
Treatment
- Cysts should be aspirated
- Blood stained or persistent refill of cyst should be biopsies or excised
Benign lumps - Epithelial hyperplasia: features and treatment
Features
- Variable clinical presentation ranging form generalised lumpiness through to discrete lump
- Disorder consists of increased cellularity of terminal lobular unit
- Atypical features and family history of breast Ca confers greatly increased risk of malignancy
Treatment
- If no atypical features, then conversation treatment
- those with atypical features: close monitoring or surgical resection
Benign lumps - Fat necrosis: features and treatment
Features
- Up to 40% have traumatic Ae
- Physical features usually mimic carcinoma
- Mass may initially increase in size
Treatment
-Imaging and core biopsy
Benign lumps - Duct papilloma: features and treatment
Features
- Wart-like lump that usually originates from a single milk duct.
- Usually present with nipple discharge
- Large papilloma may present with mass
- No increase risk of malignancy
Treatment
-Microdochectomy: surgical removal of lactiferous duct
Mastitis: presentation, criteria for treatment and treatment
- Affects 1/10 breastfeeding women: women present with erythematous, painful and swollen breast.
- Treat if systemically unwell, nipple fissure present or symptoms do not improve after 12-24h effective milk removal/culture indicates infection
- 1st line Tx is 10-14 days flucloxacillin and continue breastfeeding/expressing during Tx
Causes of nipple discharge - Galactorrhea
- Commonest cause may be response to emotional events
- Drugs: histamine receptor antagonists
- Prolactinomas
Causes of nipple discharge - Mammary duct ectasia: definition and type of discharge
Duct ectasia: dilatation and shortening of terminal breast ducts within 3cm of nipple.
- Common, incidence increases with ages
- PC: nipple retraction, most common in menopausal women
- Discharge: thick and white in colour
*Can occur in younger smoking women (Periductal mastitis) where there are features of inflammation, abscess or mammary duct fistula with green discharge -abscess may need drainage.
Causes of nipple discharge - carcinoma: type of discharge
- Often blood stained
- May be able to palpable underlying mass or lymphadenopathy
Causes of nipple discharge - intraductal papilloma
- Growth of papilloma in a single duct
- Commoner in younger patients
- May cause blood stained discharge
- Usually no palpable lump