dimple
Was wondering if anyone can help? I have about a quarter size dimple to left side of my Left breast. Saw my GP didn't feel a lump. Have a mammogram and ultrasound schedule for 28th. I am 33 years old and was wondering if i should be concern? or what to expect with mammogram and ultrasound, if i will get results the same day? I have family history of breast cancer with grandmother and mother.
Comments
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HI gingacookiie,
Each imaging center does things differently in terms of letting you know results. Have you had a mammogram before?
Also, have you considered discussing any genetic testing, with the history in your family? It may be something you find helpful.
Please keep us posted
The Mods
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this will be my first mammogram! I know we were told we didn't need to do genetic testing so the type of breast cancer my mother had was not that type! Do you know anything about dimpling in the breast
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I have a quarter size dimple/indent but started to notice vein going to it! Any thoughts? Thanks
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I have an indention about the size of a fifty cent piece. Doctors and breast surgeon says it’s just lazy ligaments but I’m still not convinced even after a year. I did have an ultrasound and when that didn’t show anything they did the diagnostic mammogram which also showed nothing. Both of mine were the same day. Praying your indention is nothing to be concerned about!
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thank u for your thoughts and kind words!! Unfortunately there is not enough info or images about dimple breast what is B9 vs Cancerous! And of course so many stories/concerns I have read. My dimple is quarter size I can see it all the time, obviously when raising arms/ Hands on hips and flexing it very pronounce. But I also noted one vein going towards the dimple. I have Us/Mammo scheduled! My doctor nor I can feel lumps. But what I feeling is like empty space but deep feeling obviously lumpy like normal tissue. I wish i can get more answers or i anyone ever experience the same
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If no one feels anything abnormal you can stop worrying at least until the mammogram and ultrasound are completed. If they show a significant abnormality then you can be concerned. Stay away from Google until then, you'll find no useful information there until you know more about what's going on.
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Hello, gingacooki. You and your doctors are right to evaluate the dimple even though you do not feel a lump. As you mention in your other thread (best to stick to one, actually), ILC can show up as a dimple without a palpable lump. A dimple is not necessarily cancer, but it should be looked at. Googling will not help you diagnose.
So, the first suggestion I want to make is about getting a proper evaluation. Age 33 is young, and young women tend to have dense breast tissue, which makes it harder to see what's what on a mammogram. However, a 3-D mammogram (tomosynthesis) does a better job than an old-fashioned mammogram. Please make sure your doctor is sending you to a facility with 3-D equipment and has ordered this type of mammogram. The ultrasound would follow, maybe on the same day, to look more closely at anything the mammogram picks up. Now, if these two tests show nothing, the next step would be a breast MRI. A breast MRI is very good at imaging young, dense tissue and also at picking up ILC that sometimes does not show up on mammogram or ultrasound. I think your age and family history should qualify you. Be forewarned that breast MRI is very sensitive, meaning it picks up lots of things, some not cancer, so there is a risk of ending up getting a biopsy that turns out to show benign.
My second suggestion is that given the fact both your mother and grandmother had breast cancer, you get an appointment with a cancer genetics specialist, not just a general doctor/surgeon/oncologist. This person will look at your medical family tree and make an expert recommendation about genetic testing. It is a common misconception that if a person does not have a BRCA mutation, then there is no genetic link to the family breast cancer history. Wrong. There are other mutations that confer an increased risk for breast cancer, and many of them also confer a greater risk for other types of cancer, and these may show up in the family. So the expert can order a panel testing for more than BRCA. Perhaps your relatives did not have the breast cancer type typical for a BRCA mutation, but that does not rule out a different gene. Learning of a mutation can give valuable information for screening, monitoring, and treatment. Breast cancer is common, and I'm not saying you do have a mutation, just that getting a proper evaluation is smart.
In general, if you can access a university-based cancer center, or an NCCN center (or its equivalent in a country not the US), the more confident I am that you will be properly evaluated. It is encouraging that your doctor is not dismissing your concern.
Waiting for testing is nerve-wracking. Don't assume it is cancer; you don't know that it is. Be good to yourself. Do what helps you, such as exercise, distraction, and relaxation techniques. Please come back and let us know.
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