I. Etiology of nipple overflow
During non-pregnancy and non-lactation periods, the flow of fluid when squeezing the nipple is called nipple overflow. Nipple overflow is one of the common symptoms of breast disease. According to statistics, the number of people who visit the doctor with nipple overflow as the primary symptom accounts for 3% to 14% of breast diseases, and the incidence is second only to breast lumps and breast pain. If the nipple overflow is single nipple overflow, most of them are related to the following breast diseases.
1, ductal dilatation of the breast: some patients with this disease, the early first symptoms of nipple overflow. The color of the overflow is mostly brown, a few are bloody; laboratory tests of the overflow can see a large number of plasma cells, lymphocytes and no tumor cells. The disease is more common in non-lactating or menopausal women over 40 years of age. The lump is often less than 3 cm in diameter and the ipsilateral axillary lymph nodes may be enlarged, soft and painful to the touch. If the lump is complicated by infection, the inflammatory manifestation of the lump is red, swollen, hot and painful.
2, intramammary duct papilloma: this disease is common in people aged 40 to 50 years old, 75% of the tumors occur in the area adjacent to the nipple, the tumor is very small, with a tip and villi, and there are many thin-walled blood vessels, so it is easy to bleed. The tumor cells can be found in the overflow of laboratory test. Sometimes patients can find cherry-sized lumps under the areola when they palpate the breast carefully, which are soft, smooth and active.
3. Cystic hyperplasia of the breast: it is more common in women of childbearing age. Some patients have yellowish-green, brown, bloody or colorless plasma-like nipple discharge, and no tumor cells are present in the discharge on laboratory examination. This disease has two characteristics: First, it is characterized by periodic swelling and pain in the breast, which often occurs or is aggravated during the premenstrual period, and is not minded by the patient in mild cases, but can affect work and life in severe cases. The second is that breast lumps are often multiple and can be seen on one or both sides, or can be confined to a part of the breast or scattered throughout the breast. The lumps are nodular in shape and vary in size, tough and not hard, not adherent to the skin, and not well defined from the surrounding tissues.
4.Breast cancer: Some patients with breast cancer have bright red or dark red nipple overflow, sometimes clear water overflow, colorless and transparent, occasionally viscous, and no trace of cancer cells can be found in the overflow after laboratory examination. The onset of the disease is slow. Patients may unintentionally find breast lumps, mostly located in the upper inner or upper outer limit, painless and gradually larger. In advanced stages, orange peel-like skin changes and satellite nodules appear at the lesion site. The axillary lymph nodes are enlarged, hard, and fuse with each other to form a mass as the disease progresses.
5.Other causes of papillary overflow
(1) Mesencephalic diseases or pituitary lesions, such as tumors of the mesencephalon and nearby tissues, prolactin adenoma, pineal tumor, hyperpituitarism, acromegaly, etc;
(2) Endocrine system diseases, such as primary hypothyroidism, adrenal tumors, etc;
(3) Chest diseases, such as chronic mastitis, chest herpes zoster, chest wall injury, etc;
(4) side effects of drugs, such as chlorpromazine, morphine, reserpine, morpholine, gastrofacial, promethazine, methyldopa and hormonal drugs such as birth control pills, can cause endocrine dysfunction and stimulate prolactin secretion, leading to the occurrence of breast overflow;
(5) Local stimulation of the breast and systemic stress reactions, such as frequent playing or sucking of the nipple, severe mental trauma, sudden changes in lifestyle habits and other factors, can also promote the secretion of prolactin, resulting in a transient increase in prolactin and triggering breast overflow.
Second, the true and false identification of nipple overflow
1, the overflow is true or false. True overflow refers to the flow of liquid from the breast ducts. Pseudo overflow is common in those with sunken nipples, due to the accumulation of epidermal cells in the sunken area of the nipple, causing a small amount of liquid-like beanbag-like exudate, often with a foul smell. Once the sunken nipple is pulled out and local cleanliness is maintained, the “overflow” will disappear.
2. Whether the overflow is bilateral or unilateral. Bilateral overflow is physiological, and most women will still have a small amount of milk secretion if they stop breastfeeding for a year. In the middle and late stages of pregnancy, some pregnant women can squeeze out a little light-colored colostrum from both breasts. A few women may also experience a short period of milk overflow after a strong orgasm due to high blood vessel congestion in the breasts, breast distention, and erect nipples. When women go through menopause, some of them produce small amounts of milk due to endocrine disorders. All of the above are physiological conditions and are not pathological. However, bilateral nipple overflow can also be pathological, such as a condition called amenorrhea-overflow syndrome, which is caused by pituitary microadenoma and is associated with amenorrhea, headache, narrowing of the visual field, and elevated prolactin in the blood, in addition to overflow. CT brain examination can confirm the diagnosis. Another kind of double nipple overflow is seen in patients with few mastopexy.
3. Whether the overflow is single or multiple holes. The nipple has 15 to 20 openings for the milk ducts. When overflow occurs, it is important to observe from which one or several openings the fluid is overflowing. Single-porous overflow is most often an intraductal papilloma. Porous overflow may be physiologic, pharmacologic, systemic benign disease or mastopexy.
4. Whether the overflow is spontaneous or spilled after squeezing. The former is mostly pathological, and about 13% of breast cancer patients have a history of spontaneous overflow. Benign or physiological overflow is more common after squeezing.
5.The nature of overflow. Different diseases of the breast have different traits when it comes to overflow.
Such as.
(1) milk-like. Mostly physiological, such as recent after weaning or miscarriage, not a manifestation of cancer.
(2) Purulent overflow, mostly ductal dilatation and plasmacytoid mastitis.
(3) Yellowish overflow is the most common type of overflow, seen in almost all kinds of breast diseases, with mastopexy being the most common. Some of them are also intraductal papillomas or breast cancer. Therefore, this is something to be vigilant about.
(4) Bloody overflow, which can be of different colors such as bright red, coffee, yellowish, brown, etc. This kind of overflow is a danger sign and should be highly alerted. 50% to 75% of them are intraductal papillomas and 15% of breast cancers. If bloody overflow occurs after menopause, 75% is breast cancer.
(5) Clear watery overflow, colorless and transparent, occasionally sticky, leaving no trace after overflow. This kind of overflow may be a sign of breast cancer and should be further examined.
In conclusion, nipple overflow is an important breast symptom, 10%-15% of which may be breast cancer. Symptoms should be promptly seen in the hospital for cytological examination of the overflow smear. Near-infrared breast scan has a positive diagnosis rate of 80% to 95% for ductal lesions in the areola area, and ultrasound and mammogram also have a comparable accuracy rate. Selective lesion ductography is a commonly used examination method for nipple overflow, which has greater value in the differential diagnosis of benign and malignant with nipple overflow, and it can also provide physicians with accurate positioning of the scope of surgical excision.
Three, nipple overflow treatment principles
There are many kinds of papillary overflow diseases, and the clinical manifestations of various diseases are complicated, and different diseases have common clinical symptoms and no specificity. Various auxiliary examinations have their own limitations. Therefore, the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of nipple overflow diseases are difficult, resulting in the lack of a correct diagnostic basis in the management of the disease.
Some scholars believe that when dealing with nipple overflow, one should first distinguish between true and false overflow. Pseudo-overflow is feasible with the corresponding local treatment.
2.Treatment of true overflow According to the nature of overflow, cytological examination, and what is seen in mammography, we can determine whether the overflow is due to tumor.
(1) Treatment of non-tumor overflow: often caused by ductal dilatation and cystic hyperplasia of the breast. The former can be treated with medication or surgery, while the latter can be treated with herbal medicine, medication or surgery.
(2) Treatment of tumor overflow: It is often caused by intraductal papilloma or intraductal papillary carcinoma. In the former case, local segmental excision should be performed, and in the latter case, radical mastectomy for breast cancer should be performed.