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. 1984 Sep;15(9):880-9.
doi: 10.1016/s0046-8177(84)80150-1.

Structure and composition of microcalcifications in benign and malignant lesions of the breast: study by light microscopy, transmission and scanning electron microscopy, microprobe analysis, and X-ray diffraction

Structure and composition of microcalcifications in benign and malignant lesions of the breast: study by light microscopy, transmission and scanning electron microscopy, microprobe analysis, and X-ray diffraction

L Frappart et al. Hum Pathol. 1984 Sep.

Abstract

Microcalcifications previously located by radiography were extracted from 25 fresh specimens obtained from patients who had undergone tumorectomy or systematized mammary exeresis. Two principal types of microcalcifications were distinguished: Type I microcalcifications were amber in color and generally crystalline on scanning electron microscopy, with only one calcium peak on microprobe analysis; x-ray diffraction revealed that weddellite was involved. Type II microcalcifications were whitish, nonbirefringent under polarized light, and generally ovoid or fusiform, with two peaks, one calcium and the other phosphorus, on microprobe analysis; these microcalcifications were composed of calcium phosphate, the most characteristic form of which is hydroxyapatite, in the form of needles arranged in rosettes on transmission electron microscopy. Type I microcalcifications were observed in four of eight benign breast lesions, in two of three in situ lobular carcinomas, and in no intraductal adenocarcinomas or infiltrating carcinomas. Type II microcalcifications were present in all infiltrating carcinomas and intraductal adenocarcinomas; they were also found in benign lesions (four of eight) and even associated with type I microcalcifications in one in situ lobular carcinoma. There are, therefore, no "benign" or "malignant" microcalcifications; however, the presence of weddellite is a strong indication that a lesion is benign or, at most, an in situ lobular carcinoma.

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