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Breast Imaging Case of the Day

Dvora Cyrlak, MD1, Philip M. Carpenter, MD2 and Niraj B. Rawal, BS3

1 Departments of Radiological Sciences (D.C.)
2 Pathology (P.M.C.)
3 University of California, Irvine Medical Center (N.B.R.), 101 The City Drive, Orange, CA 92868-3298.



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Figure 1a.  (a, b) Craniocaudal (a) and mediolateral oblique (b) mammograms of the left breast demonstrate a 1.5-cm multilobulated, spiculated mass in the upper outer quadrant. (c) Coned compression magnification view in the mediolateral projection also demonstrates faint punctate microcalcifications. The original mammograms (not shown) demonstrated approximately 10 microcalcifications.

 


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Figure 1b.  (a, b) Craniocaudal (a) and mediolateral oblique (b) mammograms of the left breast demonstrate a 1.5-cm multilobulated, spiculated mass in the upper outer quadrant. (c) Coned compression magnification view in the mediolateral projection also demonstrates faint punctate microcalcifications. The original mammograms (not shown) demonstrated approximately 10 microcalcifications.

 


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Figure 1c.  (a, b) Craniocaudal (a) and mediolateral oblique (b) mammograms of the left breast demonstrate a 1.5-cm multilobulated, spiculated mass in the upper outer quadrant. (c) Coned compression magnification view in the mediolateral projection also demonstrates faint punctate microcalcifications. The original mammograms (not shown) demonstrated approximately 10 microcalcifications.

 


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Figure 2a.  (a) Low-power photomicrograph (original magnification, x40; hematoxylin-eosin stain) shows glandular structures of varying sizes (adenosis) with the smaller glands compressed by surrounding stromal sclerosis. (b) Low-power photomicrograph (original magnification, x40; immunoperoxidase stain with monoclonal antibody HHF-35) demonstrates a layer of cells immunoreactive for muscle actin around each of the small glands. The presence of these myoepithelial cells suggests a benign process (adenocarcinoma of the breast usually has no myoepithelium).

 


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Figure 2b.  (a) Low-power photomicrograph (original magnification, x40; hematoxylin-eosin stain) shows glandular structures of varying sizes (adenosis) with the smaller glands compressed by surrounding stromal sclerosis. (b) Low-power photomicrograph (original magnification, x40; immunoperoxidase stain with monoclonal antibody HHF-35) demonstrates a layer of cells immunoreactive for muscle actin around each of the small glands. The presence of these myoepithelial cells suggests a benign process (adenocarcinoma of the breast usually has no myoepithelium).

 





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