Indian Journal of Plastic Surgery (Jul 2010)

Axillary silicone lymphadenopathy secondary to augmentation mammaplasty

  • Dimitrios M. Dragoumis,
  • Anthoula S. Assimaki,
  • Triantafyllos I. Vrizas,
  • Aris P. Tsiftsoglou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0039-1699437
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 02
pp. 206 – 209

Abstract

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We report a case involving a 45-year-old woman, who presented with an axillary mass 10 years after bilateral cosmetic augmentation mammaplasty. A lump was detected in the left axilla, and subsequent mammography and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated intracapsular rupture of the left breast prosthesis. An excisional biopsy of the left axillary lesion and replacement of the ruptured implant was performed. Histological analysis showed that the axillary lump was lymph nodes containing large amounts of silicone. Silicone lymphadenopathy is an obscure complication of procedures involving the use of silicone. It is thought to occur following the transit of silicone droplets from breast implants to lymph nodes by macrophages and should always be considered as a differential diagnosis in patients in whom silicone prostheses are present.

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