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Anatomy and Pathology · Where Breast Lumps Hide

Breast and Axilla Masses
Read the Lump, Not the Panic

Most breast and axilla lumps are benign. The board points hide in three forks: a mass that follows the milk line, discharge that names the duct, and a node at the apex that chokes a vein. Learn the map, and the differential reads itself.

Medically reviewed by Fatima Ali, DO and Kaitlyn Cocuzzo, MD

Before you scroll
A 28-year-old woman at 32 weeks of her first pregnancy comes to the office because of a new, soft, lumpy, sponge-like mass in the right axilla that was not there before she became pregnant. It is mildly tender, with no redness and no recent injury. On examination the fullness is doughy and poorly bordered, and a tiny extra nipple sits just below it. Ultrasound shows tissue that looks just like her normal breast. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?
Why is a node the tempting wrong answer?
A lump in the axilla makes everyone reach for lymph node first. But nodes are discrete, firm, and rounded, and a reactive node needs a reason (an infection or injury). She has none, and the mass is doughy and poorly bordered, not a marble you can roll.
What do the spongy feel and the extra nipple tell you?
Tissue that feels like breast, sits on a line below an accessory nipple, and looks like breast on ultrasound IS breast. The milk line runs from axilla to groin, and leftover breast tissue is most common in the axilla.
So why now, in pregnancy?
Accessory breast tissue carries the same hormone receptors as normal breast, so it swells when pregnancy and lactation hormones rise. That is why it appeared this trimester and not before. A new spongy axillary mass that grows in pregnancy, on the milk line with an extra nipple, is accessory breast tissue, not a node.
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The Signature Game · Tap the Spot, Learn the Lump
The Milk Line and Axilla Map
One picture holds the whole topic. Tap the breast, the milk line, the axilla, or the apex under the clavicle. Each tap names what lives there and why it matters. This is the map behind every breast-and-axilla question.
BREAST MILK LINE AXILLA CLAVICLE APEX AXILLARY VEIN
Tap a glowing point
Start with the axilla: it holds the answer to the opener and to the venous trap further down.
Four points · tap each to build the whole map
From the Attending
One picture, three traps. A lump on the milk line that feels like breast is breast, not a node. A node at the apex sits on the vein, so it swells the arm. A mass in the breast is the differential you sort by feel and imaging. Learn where each one lives, and you stop guessing. Know your clues.
Pin 1 · The Lump That Follows a Line
Accessory Breast Tissue and the Milk Line
Why a brand-new axillary lump in pregnancy is breast tissue, not a node, and how the embryologic milk line gives it away.
The structure
The milk line runs from the axilla to the groin
In the embryo, a ridge of ectoderm (the mammary ridge, or milk line) runs down each side of the body from the armpit to the inner thigh. Normally one breast forms on each side and the rest of the ridge melts away.
When part of the ridge persists, you get an accessory nipple (polythelia) or accessory breast tissue (polymastia), and it can sit anywhere along that line. The most common spot is the axilla.
Straight line below the nipple. An extra nipple always sits in a vertical line under the normal one, never off to the side. That line IS the milk line.
Why it shows up in pregnancy
It carries hormone receptors, so it swells with the breast
Accessory breast tissue is real glandular breast tissue. It answers to estrogen, progesterone, and prolactin just like the normal breast.
That is why it can be silent for years, then enlarge, ache, or even leak milk during pregnancy and lactation. A new, soft, spongy axillary fullness in a pregnant patient that was absent before is the classic story.
Accessory (supernumerary) nipple on the chest, sitting along the embryologic milk line below the normal nipple
An accessory nipple (polythelia) sitting along the milk line. The same milk line carries accessory breast tissue, most often in the axilla.
From the Attending
Do not confuse the lump that feels like breast with a node. A node is a firm marble with a reason behind it. Accessory tissue is a doughy field that matches the breast on ultrasound and sits on the milk line with an extra nipple. When a new spongy axillary mass grows in pregnancy, find the milk line. Every time.
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Sources
Vignettes are original clinical teaching cases. Demographics, values, and answer order are written for practice. Always confirm management against current guidance at the point of care.
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