The Postoperative Breast: Imaging Findings and Diagnostic Pitfalls After Breast-Conserving Surgery and Oncoplastic Breast Surgery.
Sarah M PittmanEric L RosenWendy B DeMartiniDung H NguyenSteven P PoplackDebra M IkedaPublished in: Journal of breast imaging (2024)
Breast surgery is the cornerstone of treatment for early breast cancer. Historically, mastectomy and conventional breast-conserving surgery (BCS) were the main surgical techniques for treatment. Now, oncoplastic breast surgery (OBS), introduced in the 1990s, allows for a combination of BCS and reconstructive surgery to excise the cancer while preserving or enhancing the contour of the breast, leading to improved aesthetic results. Although imaging after conventional lumpectomy demonstrates typical postsurgical changes with known evolution patterns over time, OBS procedures show postsurgical changes/fat necrosis in locations other than the lumpectomy site. The purpose of this article is to familiarize radiologists with various types of surgical techniques for removal of breast cancer and to distinguish benign postoperative imaging findings from suspicious findings that warrant further work-up.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- high resolution
- surgical site infection
- early breast cancer
- adipose tissue
- patients undergoing
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- radiation therapy
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- young adults
- acute coronary syndrome
- lymph node
- mass spectrometry
- artificial intelligence
- fatty acid
- atrial fibrillation
- rectal cancer