Interactive Transcript
0:00
41 year old female presents for a
0:03
baseline mammogram bilateral implants are
0:06
placed 10 years ago.
0:08
So these are her CC
0:11
and mlos use it's I will
0:14
tell you it's really hard to see it on these views. But look at this mammogram
0:17
and what number one what
0:20
type of implants does she have this is it saline or
0:23
silicone? And is it behind the
0:26
pack earned from the pack muscle?
0:29
So in this case, these are retropectoral so you
0:32
can see the pec muscle coming around the implant and they're saline
0:35
because you can see through them silicone implants tend
0:38
to be denser and they are more white and you won't
0:41
see this nozzle like you do in saline implants.
0:44
So they're they're retroxyl implants. But
0:47
what I will tell you that doesn't display that
0:50
well is that she's got some calcifications in
0:53
her left upper outer breasts.
0:56
And that I don't know if that's displaying well,
0:59
but they're there, okay.
1:02
so you're going to give her a buy red zero because
1:07
we need to call her back for additional diagnostic views.
1:11
What views should we get to further evaluate these calcifications?
1:17
CC and mlo Mags
1:19
CC and ml mag
1:23
Spa compression or xccl
1:33
so the correct answer is CC and ml
1:36
magnification views really there's
1:39
no indication for any mlmag. The
1:43
reason we're getting ml mag is to see if or
1:46
a true lateral magnification view is to
1:49
see if the calcifications layer okay, if they
1:52
layer it's benign milk of calcium. So that's really the best
1:55
way to see if something layers. So whenever I see an mlo magnification view
1:58
I kind of roll my eyes because there's really no
2:01
role for ML magnification. So if you see that
2:04
on a test, you could already exclude that
2:07
answer. So yeah, certainly for calcifications. We
2:10
want to get magnification always want to get CC and
2:13
ml not ml.
2:15
Okay.
2:16
So these are her calcifications.
2:21
If I had to use a descriptor, I would say that there they are
2:24
segmental pleomorphic calcifications. They
2:27
span a large extent. They stand about
2:30
10.5 centimeters.
2:33
Um, I don't always do an ultrasound. But in this case, I
2:36
felt like that there was maybe an underlying mass and she
2:39
was so dense. We've been doing a lot more survey ultrasounds. So
2:42
in this case we saw on a regular hypogic math
2:45
and the upper-adder quadrant. You can
2:48
see these little punctate echogenic Foci which corresponds
2:51
to calcifications.
2:54
You know, we're suspicious. We're going to look in her lymph node.
2:57
This is a birad four or five depending on
3:00
how confident you are. But certainly these are very
3:03
suspicious.
3:06
Like I said in this case actually we did it
3:09
under actually in this case. I think we did a stereo and
3:12
an ultrasound biopsy. Remember if you see
3:15
something on mammogram animal ultrasound you would like to buy obsc under ultrasound to
3:18
give you the better chance of getting invasive cancer if
3:21
there is any
3:22
This is what our Mr. MRI look like, you know,
3:25
so she's got this linear clumps non-mass enhancement in
3:28
the left upper outer breast.
3:30
That corresponds to where we saw the calcifications
3:33
and it certainly is suspicious.