For most women, if not all women, having cyst on the breast is upsetting. It can bring up many different feelings and worries. Perhaps, they feel relieved to know that such breast
change is not harmful, dangerous, or cancerous.
Cysts And Cancer
Therefore, cysts are fluid-filled bubbles,
similar to blisters, in the breast tissue. Most cysts develop rapidly and then
stay the same size. A small number shrink or continue to grow. Cysts are often
too small to feel. However, on ultrasound they appear as a round clear shape
with a distinct outline. Larger cysts can be felt in the breast tissue. They
might be firm or soft. Often women have more than one cyst at a time.
Cysts are not harmful
or dangerous, but they are sometimes uncomfortable or painful. Often women find
that their cyst(s) get tender or enlarged in the days before their period.
Pushing on cysts can also make them tender.
Researchers do not know
what causes cysts. But what is known is that they are very common and can
affect women of any age. Cysts are especially common in women between the ages
of 45 and 50. They often appear with menopause, when a woman’s hormones are
changing rapidly, and go away when menopause has finished. Women who take
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) often get breast cysts.
More so, for many women,
their biggest concern about a cyst is that it is, or will become, cancer. Cysts
are not cancers. They are no more likely to become cancerous than any other
part of the breast. There is no evidence that cysts cause cancer. Having a
cancer in the same area as a cyst is a coincidence.
Diagnosing
And Treating A Cyst
A physical examination
and an ultrasound will usually provide enough information for the doctor to
diagnose a cyst.
If a cyst is large
enough to feel, the doctor will usually offer to drain it using a needle.
Although cysts are not dangerous, draining them removes the lump and often
helps women to stop worrying. Doctors do not usually drain cysts that can be
seen on ultrasound, but are too small to feel.
To drain a cyst, the
doctor uses a needle to take the fluid out. This process is called Fine Needle
Aspiration (FNA). The needle is finer than one used to take blood. FNA can be
uncomfortable but usually is not painful. Women who have experienced some pain
say that it passes quickly.
The fluid in a cyst
might be clear or coloured (for example yellow, green, orange or black). This
fluid is normal and it is not necessary to send it for testing.
Cysts can be drained at
the clinic immediately. This only takes only a couple of minutes. The doctor
might ask you to come back for a check-up in a couple of months.
What Happens Now?
Drained cysts shrink
away to nothing. Usually there is no further action needed.
Many women have cysts
that come back. These might be cysts that refill with fluid or they might be
new cysts. Recurring cysts are not dangerous. They are treated the same way as
the first cyst.
If you have a cyst
drained and the lump refills within 24 hours, you should make an appointment to
see the doctor again.
Your cyst does not put
you at any increased risk of breast cancer. You should follow the
recommendations for breast cancer screening for women of your age and family
history.
#DubemickyInspiringGreetnessDaily. Good afternoon, and have yourself a wonderful day.

No comments:
Post a Comment