Carcinoma right breast
Updates to Case Attributes
It is, unfortunately, become common knowledge in the breast literature and recommendations that clinical exam has supposedly limited value. We do women a disservice by propagating this myth. The converse is true in everyday everyday breast practice as many senologistssonologists will tell you. Patients regularly do feel lesions that are clinically significant in spite of the meta analyses-analyses which are now vogue. This patient had done diligent clinical exam for years and was adamant the lesion was new and wanted it worked up. It turned out be be a small malignancy.
This case is no exception.
The moral here is not all you read is necessarily applicable/of value to your clinical breast imaging practice. I always take notice if a patient insists that something has changed in her breast. Get up and go and review the ultrasound images in real time. Talk to the patient and ask her to show you what she feels.
I challenge anyone even with hindsight to have picked up that lesion in a batch of screening mammograms. The patient found it.
-<p>It is unfortunately become common knowledge in the breast literature and recommendations that clinical exam has supposedly limited value. We do women a disservice by propagating this myth. The converse is true in everyday breast practice as many senologists will tell you. Patients regularly do feel lesions that are clinically significant in spite of the meta analyses which are now vogue. This patient had done diligent clinical exam for years and was adamant the lesion was new and wanted it worked up. It turned out be be a small malignancy.</p><p>This case is no exception.</p><p>The moral here is not all you read is necessarily applicable/of value to your clinical breast imaging practice. I always take notice if a patient insists that something has changed in her breast. Get up and go and review the ultrasound images in real time. Talk to the patient and ask her to show you what she feels.</p><p>I challenge anyone even with hindsight to have picked up that lesion in a batch of screening mammograms. The patient found it.</p>- +<p>It is, unfortunately, become common knowledge in the breast literature and recommendations that clinical exam has supposedly limited value. We do women a disservice by propagating this myth. The converse is true in everyday breast practice as many sonologists will tell you. Patients regularly do feel lesions that are clinically significant in spite of the meta-analyses which are now vogue. This patient had done diligent clinical exam for years and was adamant the lesion was new and wanted it worked up. It turned out be a small malignancy.</p><p>This case is no exception.</p><p>The moral here is not all you read is necessarily applicable/of value to your clinical breast imaging practice. I always take notice if a patient insists that something has changed in her breast. Get up and go and review the ultrasound images in real time. Talk to the patient and ask her to show you what she feels.</p><p>I challenge anyone even with hindsight to have picked up that lesion in a batch of screening mammograms. The patient found it.</p>
Systems changed:
- Oncology
Updates to Study Attributes
Annotated image of there 2014 image showing a minute spiculated lesion.