You can never be too safe when it comes to breast
cancer. Doing self-exams, having mammograms and watching for warning signs can
save your life.Raised awareness and more candidness about breast
health is a good thing. But it also has fueled some common misperceptions.
Holly Pederson, MD, Director of Medical Breast
Services at Cleveland Clinic’s Breast Center, explains the truth behind five
myths she often hears from patients.
Myth 1: If a breast lump is movable, it’s not
cancer.
“Actually, breast cancers almost always begin in a
movable state,” Dr. Pederson says. “It’s not until they grow larger that they
attach to something and stop moving.”
You should tell your doctor about any lump you
feel in your breast.
When doing a self-exam, feel around your breasts
for something hard that doesn’t belong there, Dr. Pederson says. It may feel
like a frozen pea or lima bean, or be smooth and very firm, like a marble.
Myth 2: Breast cancer doesn’t cause pain.
That’s not entirely true. Fast-growing breast
cancers can be painful. Breast pain in one particular spot, especially in older
women, is a warning sign.
“Most women experience general breast pain or
soreness that comes and goes,” Dr. Pederson says. “That’s not a sign of cancer,
but usually due to hormone fluctuations or too much caffeine.”
Myth 3: Women with lumpy breast tissue have dense
breasts.
False. “Lumpy breast tissue has nothing to do with
breast density,” Dr. Pederson says. “Your breasts can feel lumpy but not appear
dense on a mammogram.”
Nearly one in two women have dense breast tissue,
indicated by the amount of milk glands and ducts and supportive tissue, which
appear solid white on a mammogram. Because cancer can appear the same way,
women with dense breasts may choose to have 3D mammography for better cancer
detection and fewer false positives. Women at high risk may qualify for MRI
screening.
Myth 4: Doctors can tell if a lump is cancer just
by feeling it.
Wrong. Neither you nor your healthcare provider —
no matter how good he or she is — can tell whether a lump is cancer without
diagnostic imaging.
“Providers who say, ‘It’s probably OK,’ without
investigating further may cause a delay in diagnosing breast cancer,” Dr.
Pederson says. “Don’t let your doctor guess. Get imaging.”
Women age 30 and older will have a diagnostic
mammogram and ultrasound. An ultrasound helps evaluate a mass by assessing
whether it is solid or fluid-filled. Women under age 30 will have only an
ultrasound because younger, denser breasts are difficult to evaluate by
mammogram.
Suspicious lumps should be biopsied. Typically, a
sample of tissue is drawn through a needle. Then the tissue is studied under a
microscope.
Myth 5: Nipple discharge is usually a sign of
cancer.
No, the opposite is true. Many women have leftover
milk in their ducts after breastfeeding, or they have debris that can cause
greenish or even black discharge that can be squeezed out of the ducts, Dr.
Pederson says.
“What’s more concerning is bloody or clear
discharge that leaks out when you’re not squeezing,” she says. “This type of
discharge can be a sign of breast cancer about 10 percent of the time. Even
with bloody nipple discharge, the cause is usually a benign condition inside
the milk duct.”
Ruling out cancer
Lumps, pain and other breast abnormalities affect
almost every woman at some point. Usually they are not cancer, but getting them
checked out is a must. Most of the time, you can’t safely rule out cancer
without a proper evaluation.
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