Mammogram With Breast Implants: What You Need to Know
Mammograms may be one of the more dreaded things on your healthcare to-do list—right up there with pap smears and visits to the dentist’s office—but you can’t ignore that they’re one of the most important preventative measures a woman can take when it comes to protecting her health. Even with all the newer technologies and techniques out there (breast MRIs and nuclear scan tests, to name a couple) mammograms are holding strong as the go-to method for keeping tabs on the girls—they’re still the most accurate test out there when it comes to detecting breast cancer. They’re just as important after you get your implants as they were before you had them . . . but there are a few things you need to know before you go in to get checked. What do you need to know about mammograms if you have breast implants? Read on to learn why they’re so important, and what you need to find out before you schedule an appointment.
Obstructed Vision
Did you know that mammograms can reveal changes in your breast up to two whole years before you or your doctor would ever notice them? That’s why they’re so important! If you’ve had breast augmentation surgery, though, it complicates the process a little bit. Happy as your implants may make you, they tend to get in the way during a mammogram
Silicone implants look like a solid mass on x-rays—the machine just can’t see through them. This lack of transparency means that they can hide some of your breast tissue, making it harder for the radiologist reading your scans to find the abnormalities they’re checking for. This is especially true if your implants were placed in front of your chest muscles, rather than underneath them. Saline implants cause some decrease in transparency, but not to as great an extent as silicone gel.
Working Around the Issue
There is, luckily, a way to perform a mammogram well despite any interference your implants might cause—a technique called implant displacement views. This method involves moving the implants back against the chest wall and then pulling the breast tissue out from behind it before it is x-rayed. Implant displacement views maximize the amount of breast tissue that can be viewed, thereby increasing the radiologist’s likelihood of detecting any abnormalities they might otherwise miss.
Speak Up!
Implant displacement views can make all the difference in making sure your mammogram is as effective as possible . . . but the technician and radiologist performing your procedure need to know what they’re looking at before they start! And there’s only one way for them to know what they will be dealing with going into the appointment: you have to tell them yourself.
Every time you schedule an appointment for a mammogram, you should let the person on the other end of the phone know that you have breast implants; then, make sure to specifically ask if they have someone there with training and experience in performing mammograms on women with implants. If they don’t—go somewhere else! If they do, still be sure to remind them when you arrive at your appointment the day of that you have implants. Also, bring it up to the technician who is performing your mammogram. You can also ask your regular doctor for a referral to a clinic where they know the radiologists have experience reading scans of breasts with implants.
All the Facts
When you’re talking about implants and mammograms, you can’t ignore the fact that there is a small risk involved: Implants have been known to rupture during the procedure, and as rare as that is, it’s important to know that it can happen. Rather than let this fact scare you off from mammograms, however, think of it as yet another reason to go to someone who is skilled in performing mammograms on women with implants—going to an experienced doctor will minimize the probability of a rupture. It’s understandable to be nervous, but keep in mind that in this case, the benefit—detecting cancer early—far outweighs the risk.
Take Care of Your Girls
Make no mistake—mammograms are worth the hassle! Studies have shown that mammograms are a valuable means of identifying breast cancer in women who have implants, even though a little extra work is required during the procedure. Breasts with implants need to get scanned just as much as those that don’t have them—so if you’ve been avoiding that mammogram, make an appointment soon . . . and make sure it’s with someone who knows what they’re doing!