Breast Mass Resident Survival Guide

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Overview

A breast mass is described as a mass that develops in the breast tissue. They differ widely in sizes and textures, and symptoms like pain or tenderness. They can be large or small and may either feel hard or spongy. Most of the breast masses are discovered incidentally, either by women on self-breast examination, physical examination by the practitioner, or if an imaging study was done for some other diagnosis. Sometimes, the diagnosis is made while the annual mammography is done to detect possible suspicious lesions. Women of the reproductive age group are more prone to develop breast lumps or masses. Breast masses can be physiological like adenosis or pathological like malignancy or cancer. Occasionally, breast masses can be associated with hormonal changes, which have a waxing and waning course. Breast masses, although uncommon, can occur in men. Most of the breast masses are benign. Imaging studies like mammograms, ultrasound, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology, and Biopsy are used for confirming the diagnosis. If the diagnosis of cancer is confirmed, modalities like lumpectomy, mastectomy, chemotherapy, or radiation are used to treat that.

Causes

Life Threatening Causes

Common Causes

breast cysts, which are soft, fluid-filled sacs milk cysts, referring to sacs filled with milk that can occur during breast-feeding fibrocystic breasts, a condition in which breast tissue feels lumpy in texture and is sometimes accompanied by pain fibroadenoma, meaning noncancerous rubbery lumps that move easily within the breast tissue and rarely become cancerous hamartoma, which is a benign, tumorlike growth intraductal papilloma, referring to a small, non-cancerous tumor in a milk duct lipoma, which is a slow-growing, noncancerous, fatty lump mastitis, or an infection of the breast injury breast cancer