A forty-five year old female who recently delivered a healthy infant presents to her primary care physician with complaints of pain when she abducts her right arm. She also reports tenderness around her right axilla and redness
around her right nipple. The patient reports she is breast feeding her infant and has also noticed a peculiar drainage from the same breast. The patient also reports that prior to her pregnancy she performed breast self-exams intermittently and noticed no unusual masses or discharges from either breast. On examination, the physician notes that the patient has a reddened area at six o'clock on her right breast. On palpation it is firm, and purulent non-bloody drainage is expressed from the nipple. The physician suspects that it is mastitis and prescribes antibiotics, cessation of breast feeding (while continuing to use a breast pump) and recommends the application of heat to the area.
Questions to consider:
- What groups of lymph nodes
filter the lymphatic drainage of the breast and could help prevent or slow down the spread of infectious material?
Pectoral (anterior axillary) nodes
Central axillary nodes
Apical/subclavian nodes
Parasternal (internal thoracic nodes)
- Which lymph nodes receive most of the lymphatic drainage of the breast? Where will the lymphatics from the nipple drain?
Pectoral and central axillary lymph nodes receive the bulk (75%) of the lymphatic drainage. The anterior intercostal region drains medial toward the parasternal/internal thoracic nodes and the superior portion of the chest wall drains toward the subclavian nodes. More superficial regions of the breast drain along the subcutaneous lymphatics to the contralateral breast and superior abdominal wall. Most of the lymphatics from the nipple, areola, and lobules of the breast will drain to the subareolar plexus. This plexus then meshes with a larger cutaneous circumareolar plexus through which lymphatics may travel to the opposite side of the chest wall.
The major pathway of lymphatic drainage from the mammary gland is along lymphatic channels which parallel:
- subcutaneous venous networks to the contralateral breast and to the abdominal wall.
- tributaries of the axillary vessels to the axillary nodes.
- tributaries of the intercostal vessels to the parasternal nodes and posterior mediastinal nodes.
- tributaries of the internal thoracic (mammary) vessels to the parasternal nodes.
- tributaries of the thoracoacromial vessels to the apical nodes.
- What is the origin and insertion of the following muscles and how are they related to the breast?
Pectoralis major:
Origin: Sternal half of the clavicle and the lateral anterior surface of the sternum and manubrium to the seventh rib.
Insertion: Distal fibers from a thick tendon that inserts on the lateral lip of the intertubercular groove of the humerus (aka. crest of the greater tubercle).
Pectoralis minor:
Origin: Third, fourth, and fifth ribs and the aponeurosis of the external intercostal muscles.
Insertion: Coracoid process of the scapula.
- What nerves provide sensory innervation to the breast? Why has the patient been feeling pain in the nipple and what nerve is involved?
Sensory innervation is provided by lateral and anterior cutaneous branches of intercostal nerves 2 through 6. The pain in the nipple is conveyed by the anterior cutaneous branch of the 4th intercostal nerve which extends midline to the nipple.
- Why does the patient have pain during abduction? What nerves innervate pectoralis major and minor muscles?
The patient's pain and difficulty in raising her arm might be related to inflammation of the nerves which supply her pectoralis major muscle. These nerves would include both the medial and lateral pectoral nerves, which are branches of the brachial plexus.
- The following nerves are related to the axillary lymph nodes and to the breast; match the following nerve with the appropriate muscle:
Long thoracic nerve - Serratus anterior
Thoracodorsal nerve - Latissimus dorsi
Medial pectoral nerve - Pectoralis minor and sternocostal portion of major
Lateral pectoral nerves - Pectoralis major, clavicular head
- What are the major arteries and veins of the right breast?
Arterial: The arterial blood supply is from several sources. Anterior perforating branches of the internal thoracic artery pierce the second through the fifth intercostal spaces. Branches of the axillary artery include the lateral thoracic artery and thoracoacromial arteries. Finally, there are lateral cutaneous branches from the posterior intercostal arteries.
Venous: Venous drainage occurs from the breast primarily through tributaries to the axillary vein. Additional venous drainage occurs via the internal thoracic, lateral thoracic, and the intercostal veins (third through the fifth).
- This patient has a subareolar abscess of the breast. Mastitis usually occurs during lactation and breast feeding, and is typically caused by the organism Staphylococcus aureus. Treatment of this patient would include antibiotics, incision and drainage of the abscess
and excision of the diseased duct
. Due to the patient's age, a careful follow-up should be performed in order to rule out an inflammatory carcinoma. Questions to ask the patient with regard to the nature of nipple discharge would include: Is the discharge uni- or bilateral? Is it milky? Is it blood tinged? Blood tinged discharge from one breast could be suggestive of an underlying malignancy - the most common of which would be an intraductal neoplasm.
References:
Clinically Oriented Anatomy (1992): pp 44-48.
Pre-test Self-Assessment and Review (1991) : pp. 87
Gross Anatomy Quizmaster (1996): Quiz 4
Advanced Surgical Recall (1994) pp. 515 -517.
Moore's Clinical Anatomy pp. 72 - 74.
Burkel, et al. pp. 107 - 114.