What color is a benign mammogram?

Benign mammograms are usually yellowish, creamy white, or lighter in color, and are most commonly seen in benign conditions such as breast fibroids and breast nodules.
The color change of the tissue in the breast puncture will have a certain supportive role in the determination of benign and malignant, but the final results of the pathology examination should be used as the direct evidence to confirm the diagnosis, so as to avoid misdiagnosis and omission of the diagnosis.
Breast fibroids are often manifested as smooth, well-defined lumps, and are common in women aged 20 to 25 years old. Most of them are observed and followed up, and patients with larger fibroids require surgical treatment. Since it is a benign disease, most of the puncture fluid on pathologic examination is yellowish and milky white.
Breast hyperplasia produces nodules that are punctured under ultrasound localization, using a puncture needle to enter the local tissue grooves of the breast nodule, and then determine the nature of the nodule through pathological examination. If the puncture material is pale yellow and milky white, most of them are benign nodules, with the clinical manifestation of localized breast lumps, or regular pain symptoms.
If the puncture material is brownish red, blood red, may be malignant breast disease, need timely treatment, so as not to delay the disease.