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Skin Changes (Redness, Thickening, Dimpling)

Understanding what your imaging found.

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Quick Answer

What Are Breast Skin Changes?

Breast skin changes refer to any visible alteration in the appearance or texture of the skin on or around the breast. These include:

Common Causes

Benign / Inflammatory (most common):

Serious causes requiring urgent evaluation:

When Should You Get It Checked?

See a doctor promptly - ideally within days - if:

Important: Inflammatory breast cancer can look exactly like a breast infection. If skin redness, warmth, and swelling do not begin to clearly improve with antibiotics, insist on imaging to rule out IBC.

How Doctors Evaluate It

What Happens Next?

Infection (cellulitis/mastitis): Antibiotic treatment. Improvement should be seen within 48–72 hours. If not, further imaging is needed to rule out cancer.
Abscess: Antibiotic treatment plus ultrasound-guided drainage of the pus collection.
Eczema / contact dermatitis: Identifying and removing the trigger; topical steroid creams and moisturizers.
Fat necrosis: Often managed with observation. Biopsy may be needed to confirm the diagnosis as benign.
Inflammatory breast cancer confirmed: Treated as a medical urgency. IBC is treated with chemotherapy first (before surgery), followed by modified radical mastectomy, and then radiation therapy.
Other breast cancer types: Full staging and multidisciplinary treatment planning.

Common Questions About Breast Skin Changes

These are the most common questions patients have about breast skin changes.

1. My breast is red and swollen. How do I know if it's an infection or inflammatory breast cancer?

Both can look identical at first. Infection is by far more common. Key differences: IBC tends to progress rapidly over days to weeks, doesn't always respond to antibiotics, and often occurs without a fever. If you start antibiotics and don't see clear improvement within 48–72 hours, your doctor should order imaging. A skin biopsy is the definitive test if cancer is suspected.

2. What exactly is peau d'orange, and should I be worried?

Peau d'orange means "orange peel skin" in French. It describes a dimpled, pitted texture caused by fluid buildup that is blocked from draining normally through the lymphatic vessels. The skin over the breast pores gets held down while surrounding tissue swells, creating the orange peel effect. It is a hallmark sign of inflammatory breast cancer, though it can occasionally be seen in severe infections. If you see this pattern on your breast, seek medical evaluation urgently - within days, not weeks.

3. Can breast dimpling be caused by something other than cancer?

Yes. Dimpling can result from fat necrosis, fibrocystic changes, or scar tissue from prior surgery or injury. However, because dimpling can also be caused by invasive ductal carcinoma, lobular carcinoma, and inflammatory breast cancer, any new dimpling should be evaluated with imaging and clinical examination.

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This service provides educational explanations of radiology reports and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Medical decisions should always be made in consultation with your physician.