MBBS, MS-Gen Surg, FRCS (Glasgow),FRACS, MS-Breast Surg(USYD)
Breast, Oncoplastic & General Surgeon
Providing Care when It Matters Most
MBBS, MS-Gen Surg, FRCS (Glasgow)
FRACS, MS-Breast Surg(USYD)
Breast, Oncoplastic & General Surgeon
Providing Care when It Matters Most
A Clinical Breast Exam is a physical exam of the breasts and the underarm area by your breast surgeon.
The purpose of a Clinical Breast Exam is to look at any:
Men who find a lump or a change in their breasts should also have a Clinical Breast Exam.
Clinical Breast exams are an important part of early detection. Although most lumps are discovered through breast self-exams, a Clinical Breast Exam conducted by an expert may notice a suspicious place that fails to register as a warning in the patient’s mind.
You are asked to remove your clothing from the waist up and while on the examination table you are covered by a sheet or gown.
The Clinical Breast Exam starts with your doctor looking at the breasts while you are seated, standing and then when you are lying down.
You may be asked to raise your arms over your head, let them hang by your sides, or press your hands against your hips. These postures allow your doctor to look for differences in size or shape between your breasts.
Your doctor is looking for:
Next, the doctor needs to feel or palpate, the breasts and the nipples.
Breast tissue covers a large area, it goes from the middle of the chest into the armpit and up toward the collarbone and deep inside to the muscles of the chest wall.
The Physical Breast Exam is done while you are lying down this position enables the breast tissue over the chest wall to flatten.
Your doctor will examine the entire area and will need to use some pressure to assess deeper tissue. Your doctor uses firm pressure with their fingers to feel for:
Your doctor will also feel lymph nodes in
Whether you have breast implants or not the same technique is used. You don’t need to do anything special to prepare for a Clinical Breast Exam.
If a lump is discovered, your doctor will note its size, shape, and texture. Your doctor will also check to see if the lump moves easily. Benign lumps often feel different from cancerous ones, but any lump found will likely need to be examined with further diagnostic measures.
The doctor will talk to you about anything that is found and let you know if further diagnostic tests are required.
It may be helpful to know that lumps that appear soft, smooth, round, and movable are likely to be either benign tumours or cysts. A lump that is hard and oddly-shaped and feels firmly attached within the breast is more likely to be cancer, but further tests are needed to diagnose the problem.
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