Breast pain - common symptom for women during their reproductive years
Aetiology
Mastalgia is rarely associated with malignancy unless there is a palpable breast mass
Pathophysiology
Usually cyclic but can be noncyclic
Most women presenting with cyclic mastalgia have an intense variant of physiologic breast changes that occur during the menstrual cycle
The cyclic variant is usually diffuse and most intense during the immediate premenstrual phase of the cycle
Cyclic mastalgia is usually bilateral but can be unilateral
Noncyclic mastalgia is usually localized, often persistent, and less responsive to treatment than cyclic mastalgia
Management
After complete evaluation and examination including a mammogram for a woman aged 35 or older, the patient can be reassured that there is no evidence of cancer and that her symptoms are physiologic
Therapies (if required) include evening primrose oil and tamoxifen