What symptom does mammary gland duct dilate have?
summary
Mammary duct ectasia is also known as plasma cell mastitis. Such a disease will undoubtedly affect its normal work and learning. The incidence rate of non lactation breast abscess is about 5% of the benign breast diseases. It is a chronic breast disease with long history and complex and diverse lesions. It is generally considered that the disease is an autoimmune disease or a degenerative disease. Etiology and endocrine disorders are related, let me share with you the symptoms of mammary duct dilatation?.
What symptom does mammary gland duct dilate have?
First, the incidence of areola on one side is more common, there are also bilateral cases at the same time. The lesion involved unilateral breast. Often accompanied by nipple depression history, in the depression of the nipple can have stinky tofu like substance secretion.
Second: nipple discharge, its initial performance can be spontaneous or intermittent nipple discharge, generally brown or bloody and purulent secretions, which is characterized by squeezing any place within the scope of lesions can make secretions flow from the nipple.
Third: areola mass, mass can suddenly appear, local pain can appear, skin color slightly red, forming abscess, after ulceration pus with odor, long time does not close mouth, or relapse after healing, ipsilateral armpit can be accompanied by swollen lymph nodes, tenderness. Other main clinical manifestations include breast pain, axillary lymph node enlargement, breast swelling with local skin redness and swelling, recurrent chronic inflammatory process, formation of chronic breast fistula, often a small amount of purulent secretion overflow, nipple invagination, and "orange peel" changes of breast skin.
matters needing attention
1. Ductectomy is suitable for patients with early course of disease, general expansion of subareolar duct and mass with nipple discharge. The method is to make an arc incision along the edge of areola, retain the nipple, remove all expanded ducts from below the nipple, and wedge-shaped resection of breast mass tissue under the areola. 2. Segmental mastectomy is suitable for patients with mass under areola and periductal inflammation. During the operation, the large duct and tissue around the mass should be removed from the nipple to prevent the formation of subareolar cyst, breast fistula and nipple discharge. 3. Simple mastectomy is suitable for patients with extensive lesions and large masses, especially for those who are located under the areola and adhesion with skin to form sinus. Subcutaneous mastectomy or simple mastectomy is feasible.