Attention e-learning users:
We’re pleased to announce that elearning.mammographyed.com is now part of The Tabár Foundation for Breast Cancer Research and Education.
While the platform has a new home, nothing else has changed—Dr. Tabár continues to lead and deliver the same high-quality educational content.
Thank you for being part of our mission to advance breast cancer education!
Sincerely,
László Tabár, M.D. FACR (Hon)
The most complex acinar adenocarcinoma cases, presented in this lecture, are those where the presence of extensive but occult carcinoma of ductal origin (DAB) causes surprise for the breast imager. Proper selection of the diagnostic tools help solving most of the perception and differential diagnostic problems.
Asymmetric densities with no associated microcalcifications on the mammogram are a considerable challenge for the radiologist reading mammograms. It is important to distinguish between asymmetric densities corresponding to normal fibroglandular tissue (in order to cut back on unnecessary call-back rate) and the non-calcified malignant or benign breast lesions (in order to achieve high sensitivity). The lecture series "Asymmetric densities with no associated microcalcifications on the mammogram" provide the radiologists detailed, practical information from the basics through the most complex breast malignancies. The lecture series are interactive, involving the audience in the screening process and the immediate workup of the finding uses the multimodality approach to arrive at the correct diagnosis.
This is lecture G in a consecutive series of lectures.