Breast masses, new method of removing benign breast masses

  It’s a woman’s nature to love beauty, but what if you don’t want to have surgery because you’re afraid of the surgical scar that will affect your beauty?  Now there is a new solution! The fully automated minimally invasive breast rotation system can solve this problem very well. It only has a 12.5px wound, and under the guidance of high-frequency ultrasound, the lump in the breast is removed at once.  The first generation is the Mammotome vacuum-assisted minimally invasive rotary mastectomy system developed and launched by Johnson & Johnson in 1999, which can biopsy and remove breast lesions in a precise, minimally invasive and safe manner, but its blade cannot be rotated and the specimens of the breast it cuts have to be removed manually. The 2nd generation is the Anker Automatic Breast Minimally Invasive Rotary Excision System, which overcomes the shortcomings of the 1st generation, its head can rotate 360° freely and the excised specimens are automatically stored in the specimen box, and it also has additional functions such as drug administration through the head to stop bleeding and aspiration, which is more advanced than the 1st generation. Our hospital intends to introduce this most advanced spinotomy system —– Anker Automatic Minimally Invasive Breast Spinotomy System. The system will be in place around April next year, when our breast disease treatment center will vigorously promote this minimally invasive rotary mastectomy for benign breast masses, especially for microscopic breast masses, multiple masses and breast cysts that cannot be reached by the hands, which has advantages that cannot be achieved by open surgery.  In the past, although such nodules could be detected by ultrasound, the doctor could only observe them and wait for them to grow and then operate, or perform extensive excision because they could not be reached by palpation, while the technique is guided by high-frequency ultrasound to precisely locate and accurately excise the lesions. The technique is guided by high-frequency ultrasound to precisely locate and accurately remove the lesion.  2, tiny incision, good cosmetic effect: Compared with the incision of 3-5 cm in traditional surgery, minimally invasive rotational mastectomy is only 2-5 mm, without sutures and almost no scars; and multiple lesions on the same side of the breast can be removed through one incision (less than 3, distance not more than 10 cm). It avoids cutting through the skin, subcutaneous tissue and normal glands, resulting in less tissue damage and faster recovery, which is especially advantageous for deep breast masses and obese patients.  3.High-tech design tip ensures safer surgery: Unique hollow puncture needle design tip, 360° free rotation, only 1 or 2 punctures throughout the surgery, avoiding needle tract transfer caused by repeated multiple punctures of tumor cell shedding, safer surgery.  4, more accurate diagnosis: biopsy of suspicious lesions can obtain large and continuous specimens, and the sample volume taken in one puncture is 8 times of traditional hollow thick needle, which reduces the false negative rate of pathology by 50% (malignant tumor cells are not detected and misdiagnosed as negative due to small and limited specimen volume); and marker clips can be placed at the biopsy site to observe whether the lesion has malignant changes at any time.  5, low infection rate, more economical: conventional surgical incision application of electrocoagulation to stop bleeding is likely to cause fat liquefaction, surgical sutures as a foreign body retained in the incision, are prone to cause incision infection and poor healing; minimally invasive mastectomy has little damage to normal tissues, no foreign body remains in the body, the risk of infection is significantly reduced, saving the cost of anti-infection.  6, fast and convenient surgery: minimally invasive breast surgery is short, light pain, 5-20 minutes for a single swelling, and you can move freely after surgery.  Indications for minimally invasive rotational mastectomy 1. Benign breast masses, fibroadenomas, nodules, cysts, asymmetric density, multifocal lesions and microcalcifications less than 3.5 cm (guided by molybdenum target).  2.Breast masses of unknown pathological nature that require excisional biopsy (<3 cm).  Contraindications to minimally invasive rotational excision of breast masses 1. Patients with suspected malignant breast tumors (e.g. breast cancer, sarcoma) can be biopsied, but mass rotational excision should be avoided; 2. Patients with bleeding tendency, hemangioma and diabetes mellitus (uncontrolled) are contraindications to surgery. If the lump is located in the areola and the diameter is >3.5 cm, rotary surgery should be performed with caution.