Interactive Transcript
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Our next topic is breast anatomy.
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I want you to review some
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basic anatomy of the breast.
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In a few different projections, this
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is a sagittal image through the center
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of the breast, and just showing that,
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uh, we have a nipple at the center,
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multiple ducts going up to the nipple.
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And as we go back into the breast tissue,
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the ducts branch and then end in the
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terminal duct lobular unit, which would
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be the functional part of the breast,
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which produces milk during lactation.
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The breast tissue forms.
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It's somewhat of a cone shape, and
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then is surrounded by fatty tissue,
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both subcutaneous and retro-glandular.
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And the fatty tissue is linked to
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the skin by the Cooper's ligaments.
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So these bands of fibrous tissue at the
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back of the breast, we have the pectoralis
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major and pectoralis minor muscle.
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And then we have the chest wall, which
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includes the ribs and the intercostal muscles.
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We do our breast MRIs in the axial plane.
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That's how we review them.
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And the images will look a
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little bit like this image.
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And on this image, we have skin.
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We have the nipple-areolar complex.
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We have ducts going backward into
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the breast and then branching.
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You can see that they form these kinds of
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segments, which would include one duct and
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all of its branches and lobules that are
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kind of triangular shaped with the broad base
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toward the posterior aspect of the breast.
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Again, the breast tissue forms a cone shape.
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There is subcutaneous fat
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and retro-glandular fat.
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And those fat lobules are linked to the
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skin and underlying structures by the
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fibrous bands called Cooper's ligaments.
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And then, um, we have pectoralis muscle
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at the posterior aspect of the breast.
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Lymph nodes are very important.
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And, uh, this is a diagram
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showing lymph node anatomy.
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The majority of the lymph nodes are going
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to be found in the axilla, although lymph
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nodes can be seen in any part of the breast.
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But the majority of intramammary lymph nodes
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are going to be upper outer quadrant and kind
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of along the lateral aspect of the breast.
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As far as the levels of lymph nodes, level
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one lymph nodes are going to be considered
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lateral to the pectoralis minor muscle.
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Level two are going to be
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posterior to the pectoralis muscle.
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And level three are going to be
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medial to the pectoralis muscle.
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And then, as we get closer to the
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clavicle, we have infraclavicular lymph
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nodes and then supraclavicular lymph nodes.
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On breast MRI, we can also see the
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internal mammary lymph nodes, and
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those are important to look at.
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They're going to be medial
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and actually inside the chest.
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So we'll look at them here in a minute.
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