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Dense Breast Tissue

What are dense breasts?

Breasts come in all shapes and sizes. The tissue inside your breasts can be different types too. Some breast tissue is fatty. Other breast tissue is dense. "Dense" means it's made of thick, fibrous tissue and milk glands.

You can't tell how dense your breasts are by looking in the mirror or feeling them. The mammogram report sent to your doctor tells how dense your breasts are. It's written by the radiologist who reads your mammogram.

You can learn how dense your breasts are from your mammogram report. There are four levels of breast density:

  • Level 1: Almost all fatty tissue (1 out of 10 women)
  • Level 2: Scattered areas of dense tissue, but mostly fatty tissue (4 out of 10 women)
  • Level 3: Mixed dense and fatty tissue, also called heterogeneous (4 out of 10 women)
  • Level 4: Extremely dense tissue (1 out of 10 women)

All of these breast types are normal. You only have dense breasts if the report says that your breasts are level 3 or level 4.

Things that can affect your breast density include your family history (genetics), being pregnant, and using estrogen hormone therapy. Your age can also make a difference. Breast tissue in younger women tends to be denser than in older women who have been through menopause.

3D Mammography

Tomosynthesis, or 3D mammography uses state-of-the art mammography technology to view breast tissue in greater detail.

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