What happens to breast pain during menopause?

Menopausal women should pay attention to breast changes, as breast pain may be a symptom of breast disease. Generally speaking, if there is sudden, persistent and relatively intense pain in the breast with obvious tenderness or even throbbing pain, it is mostly considered as various acute infectious diseases of the breast; if the pain starts or worsens mostly before menstruation and can be relieved or disappears after menstruation, showing periodic breast swelling and sometimes radiating to the ipsilateral axilla or shoulder and back, and there can be mild to moderate tenderness locally, it is often considered If the breast pain is not obvious, or only a mild vague or dull pain, without obvious attack pattern, or even sometimes the breast is not obvious pain, but only one side of the armpit or shoulder back pain, such breast pain is likely to be a signal of early malignant disease in the breast, and should be given sufficient attention; malignant lesions in the late stage of breast pain is mostly manifested as a severe and persistent burning pain in the breast. In the late stage of malignant lesions, breast pain is often characterized by severe and persistent burning pain in the breast, which is progressively worse and difficult to relieve on its own, and is accompanied by the breakdown of the local lump and necrosis or the breakdown of the surgical wound and the surrounding skin. Breast pain during menopause and some symptoms of menopause are mixed together.