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One Breast Looks Different

Understanding what your imaging found.

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Quick Answer

What Does It Mean for One Breast to Look Different?

Breast asymmetry means one breast differs from the other in terms of:

Asymmetry is classified as stable (present for years, unchanged - almost always benign) or developing (new or recently changed - requires evaluation).

Common Causes

Normal / benign reasons (most common):

Breast conditions that cause sudden change:

On mammograms: A finding called developing asymmetry - where one area of breast tissue appears denser than on a previous mammogram - carries approximately a 12% risk of being associated with breast cancer and always requires additional evaluation.

When Should You Get It Checked?

Most lifelong asymmetry is normal. However, see a doctor if:

Any new change in how one breast looks or feels - even if you can't fully describe it - is worth mentioning to your doctor. You know your own body.

How Doctors Evaluate It

What Happens Next?

Stable, longstanding asymmetry with normal imaging: Reassurance and continuation of routine screening.
Developing asymmetry on mammogram: Additional imaging (spot compression views, ultrasound, possibly MRI) to determine if there is an underlying lesion. If a lesion is found, biopsy follows.
Benign cyst or fibroadenoma found: Monitoring or aspiration/removal depending on size and symptoms.
Infection/abscess: Antibiotic treatment and possible drainage.
Cancer confirmed: Full staging and multidisciplinary treatment planning with a breast oncology team.

Common Questions About Breast Asymmetry

These are the most common questions patients have when they notice one breast looks different.

1. One of my breasts has always been bigger than the other. Is that normal?

Absolutely - this is one of the most common concerns women bring to their doctor. Studies show that more than half of women have noticeable breast asymmetry. Differences of up to one cup size are within the range of normal. If this has been stable for years and you have no other symptoms, it almost certainly does not require evaluation beyond your routine screening mammogram.

2. My mammogram says I have "developing asymmetry." What does that mean?

Developing asymmetry means one area of your breast looks denser or different on your most recent mammogram compared to earlier images. This is not a diagnosis - it is an observation that requires further investigation. About 12% of cases of developing asymmetry are associated with breast cancer. Your radiologist will likely recommend additional views, an ultrasound, or an MRI. Most women who undergo this follow-up do not have cancer.

3. Could my asymmetry be caused by weight gain?

Yes - breasts contain fatty tissue, and weight gain or loss affects breast size. Because the proportion of fat to glandular tissue varies between breasts, weight changes can increase asymmetry. This type of change is benign. However, if one breast is growing noticeably faster than the other and weight change doesn't fully explain it, it is worth getting checked.

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