Gynecomastia
Gynecomastia
8; This close up of a duct in gynecomastia shows typical columnar duct epithelium with scattered basal cells. € The nuclei are regular, without visible nucleoli, and without mitoses.


(Image Contrib. by:UCHC)(Description by: Melinda Sanders, M.D.)
T04000M71000
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Gynecomastia
Etiology

• Estrogen excess relative to androgens


Pathogenesis

• Proliferation of both ducts and stroma


Epidemiology

• Disorder of the MALE breast

• Puberty or old age

• Associated with functioning testicular neoplasms (estrogenic)

• Associated with cirrhosis

• Seen in Klinefelter^s syndrome


Clinical

• Treatment by surgery

• Indicator of hyperestrinic state.


General Gross Description

• Unilateral or bilateral

• Growth initially subareolar


General Micro Description

• Duct hyperplasia without atypia with piling up of nuclei in ducts

• No lobules found in the male breast

• Periductal pallor and fibrosis with numerous fibroblast nuclei


Reference

• Robbins and Cotran: Pathologic Basis of Disease, 7th ed., 2005, pp. 1151-2.


• Current literature from PubMed at National Library of Medicine


Synopsis by: Melinda Sanders M.D., UCHC
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