Non-lactating mastitis is a group of inflammatory lesions in women who are not breastfeeding. It is a benign breast disorder with non-cyclic breast pain, nipple overflow, nipple indentation, areolar area lump, non-lactating breast abscess, and nipple fistula as the main clinical manifestations, which is very destructive to the breast and can form abscesses and sinus tracts that do not heal over time and cause breast deformation. The incidence of this disease accounts for about 4-5% of benign breast diseases and mainly occurs in young and middle-aged women who are not pregnant or lactating. In recent years, the prevalence of this disease has been on the rise. The early manifestations of the disease include nipple discharge and inflammatory masses in the areola, sometimes accompanied by acute inflammatory reactions, and the mass phase is easily confused with breast cancer; the lesion develops into a breast abscess; the abscess can gradually increase in size and infiltrate to form a small abscess around it, or a sinus tract can be formed after penetration of the skin or incision and drainage. The lesions are prone to recurrence, and multiple skin punctures or multiple incisions and drains can cause extensive destruction, deformation or scarring of the breast. This causes great pain to women and greatly reduces the quality of life. The main causes of this disease are as follows: 1. Traumatic fat necrosis and breast hematoma. There are varying degrees of violent injuries, and the time to develop infection after trauma is usually from 1 week to several months. 2. Ductal dilatation of the breast. Some of the causes of ductal dilatation are due to previous milk retention deposits. 3, nipple infection. This is seen in cases of congenital nipple dysplasia such as malformation, sunken nipples and nipples that are not easily cleaned, or in those with a history of nipple bites, who are prone to bacterial invasion and blockage of the milk ducts, followed by pain, lumps, local redness and swelling, and pus spots visible in some nipples. 4. Combined diabetes and hyperthyroidism. When the body’s resistance decreases, the bacteria that may remain from previous lactation mastitis can easily grow and multiply, causing infection. Treatment recommendations 1. breast palpation; 2. breast ultrasound; 3. breast ductoscopy; 4. breast MRI; 5. puncture pathology. Since some inflammatory breast lesions can be cured by a combination of Chinese and Western medicine and non-surgical treatment, early and correct diagnosis can avoid unnecessary surgical treatment. The actual fact is that you will be able to get a lot more than just a few of these types of things. Strengthen physical exercise to improve the body’s ability to resist disease and keep the bowels unobstructed. Psychological care Since the disease is recurrent and difficult to heal, you should consult a doctor promptly after the disease, cooperate with the examination, make a clear diagnosis at an early stage and grasp the time of treatment; if there is destruction of breast shape, you should adjust your mentality, avoid being angry and irritable or depressed, face the disease correctly, treat it actively and strive for early recovery. Dietary care The diet should be light and vegetarian, with a small amount of protein, such as meat, fish, eggs, dairy products and a variety of grains, limit the intake of animal fat and sugar, avoid spicy and stimulating and fatty food, and do not take health products and food containing estrogen.