Upcoming Events
Log In
Pricing
Free Trial

Silicone Injection

HIDE
PrevNext

0:00

This is a 74-year-old female

0:02

presenting for a screening mammogram.

0:06

We can see that this study is technically adequate,

0:09

you know, visualization of the pectoralis muscle,

0:13

though it's difficult to see in this particular case.

0:16

And the CC views, uh, look good as well. Right away,

0:19

in this case, we can see there's

0:21

some high-density material

0:24

located in the posterior aspect of

0:27

each breast, um, with some calcified

0:31

material associated with it as well.

0:33

And if we look closely on these SM views, we

0:36

could see some of the areas of this material

0:38

have more of a rim sort of calcification.

0:41

Some of it is a little more heterogeneous, um,

0:44

more fuzzy appearance, similar on the MLO view.

0:51

You can see

0:52

some rim-type calcifications, some denser

0:54

stuff, maybe some more dense material.

0:56

Looks like it gets up into the axillary

0:58

regions bilaterally and extends

1:00

up in towards the latissimus muscles.

1:04

Now, of course, this would probably prompt anybody

1:06

to go look in the clinical record and see what's

1:08

going on or what this patient has had done.

1:12

And in this particular case, these findings are

1:14

related to, uh, injected silicone into the breast,

1:18

um, for purposes of breast augmentation.

1:22

Procedure is not typically done, uh, in the

1:24

U.S., but we will occasionally see patients

1:26

who have had this done in the past.

1:30

Because of that, we see some of these calcified,

1:32

uh, silicone granulomas, uh, which are the ones

1:36

with the rim calcifications and dense material.

1:39

And then, uh, we also see, uh,

1:42

that there's other sort of

1:44

more diffuse kind of dense material, which is,

1:46

uh, also an appearance we see in this case.

1:49

We will see some occasional associated sort

1:51

of architectural distortion going with it.

1:53

And we can see a lot of this silicone material

1:56

will sort of move up into the axillary regions,

1:59

which is taken up by the, uh, lymphatic system.

2:02

And occasionally we'll see, um, that

2:04

material even within the lymph nodes.

2:07

This appearance can be seen as, in this

2:10

case with injected silicone, which is

2:12

multiple small injections of silicone.

2:14

But we can also see a similar imaging appearance

2:16

to these in the cases where a patient might have

2:18

had, um, an extracapsular rupture of the silicone

2:22

implant and then that implant subsequently removed.

2:26

Anyway, you see, uh, large amounts of

2:30

silicone deposits throughout the breast.

2:32

Um, this makes screening, uh,

2:34

for malignancies very difficult.

2:36

Uh, and you, you just take a careful look,

2:38

uh, throughout the whole breast, trying to

2:39

look past all the dense material, see if

2:42

you can see anything that looks abnormal,

2:43

looks, changes, change from prior exams.

2:46

Otherwise, we can call this benign.

2:48

There's nothing that we need to do.

2:49

Uh, there's no particular surgical

2:51

intervention that's needed, and the

2:52

patient can just have routine screening.

Report

Faculty

Ryan W. Woods, MD, MPH

Assistant Professor of Radiology

University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health

Tags

Women's Health

Ultrasound

Tomosynthesis

Oncologic Imaging

Mammography

Breast

© 2025 Medality. All Rights Reserved.

Privacy ChoicesImage: Privacy ChoicesContact UsTerms of UsePrivacy Policy