| Literature DB >> 27307904 |
Aidan Shaw, Ben Smith, David Howlett.
Abstract
MRI is well established in the diagnosis of female breast cancer, with an important role as a problem-solving tool in the postoperative breast and in implant evaluation. Little in the literature mentions the use of MRI in male breast cancer, with there is no clear role for its use at present. We present an unusual case of bilateral male breast carcinoma and demonstrate a similar enhancement pattern to that described in female breast cancer; we also suggest other potential applications of MRI for the male breast.Entities:
Keywords: MRI, magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2015 PMID: 27307904 PMCID: PMC4900099 DOI: 10.2484/rcr.v6i3.455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Case Rep ISSN: 1930-0433
Figure 172-year-old man with breast carcinoma. Mediolateral oblique (MLO) mammogram of the right breast showing a 6mm retro-areolar rounded opacity (arrow) deep to the nipple.
Figure 272-year-old man with breast carcinoma. Axial, postcontrast, T1W fat-suppressed MRI image performed immediately after IV gadolinium administration, showing a circumscribed and avidly enhancing nodule in the right breast (arrow).
Figure 372-year-old man with breast carcinoma. Focused ultrasound of the right breast confirms an ill-defined and isoechoic nodule deep to the right nipple, correlating with the lesion seen on previous imaging (arrow).