It’s beautiful and healthy.

Breast disease is a common feature of modern women ‘ s health and morbidity, seriously endangering their physical and mental health and placing a heavy economic burden. Women in modern cities are experiencing high levels of work stress, irregularity and sleep disorders leading to endocrine disorders, and the age at which mammosis occurs is getting younger and the incidence is increasing. One way is that prevention is better than cure. Today, we’re going to take a look at all aspects of mammography. First, the antidote to breast and the physical breast is a female characteristic organ. The embryonic growth period originated in the outer layer and was a mutated sweat glands. After-birth mammography is underdeveloped, with increased estrogens associated with age and the maturity of sexual organs. With the onset of adolescence and menstruation, the ovarian function matures and stimulates breast growth, catheter expansion, conjunction tissue and fat increase, and breast increase, and changes with menstruation cycles. Women experience early childhood, childhood, adolescence, menstruation, pregnancy, breastfeeding, menstruation and old age throughout their lives. Periods vary according to endocrine changes, so there are significant physical and physical differences, and different diseases can occur in different periods, as well as differences in diagnosis and treatment. 1.1 Infant and early childhood: There is no difference between male and female breast. In the first two weeks of life, there is a one-to-two-cm constriction of the pneumatic swelling of the nipples due to the presence of the parent hormone in the baby, and even a small amount of circulatory matter can be squeezed. They can disappear within 1-3 weeks. 1.2. Childhood: There is no significant difference between men and women. In a static state. 1.3. Adolescence: This is the most important period in women ‘ s mammography throughout their lives, with menopause in the 12-15 years of age, an increase in the ovarian ovarian estrogen hormonal hormones that stimulates the growth of the mammogram, an increase in the nipple, an increase in the mammography and an increase in the colours as a result of the sterilisation of the melanin, and an increase in the hemispheric shape of the mammogram, the catheter and the interplasia surrounding it. 1.4. Age of sexual maturity: Adult and unpregnant women, breast, in addition to ovarian effects, are regulated by the adrenal and adrenal glands. Breasts are subject to the same cyclical changes as the membranes. The average period between 7 and 8 days and 18 to 19 days after menstruation is increased, the first period of menstruation is 5 to 7 days to menstruation, and the mammography leaves and catheters extend to increase growth, so that the breast can suffer slightly (swollen) pain, most of which can be reduced and disappeared after menstruation. In some cases, the increase is more severe and the pain is more severe requiring appropriate treatment. 1.5. Pregnancy: This period is characterized by an early increase in breast (5-6 weeks) and an increase in nipple tizziness and a deeper color, but the gland has no endocrine function. High growth of breast glands by mid-term and end-of-pregnancy begins to be distributed, and by 3-4 days after delivery, real genre functions have been developed, breast lobes have been sown, and catheters have stored milk. 1.6. Menopause: Breast growth is the most common form of mammography, divided into simple and cystalgenic growth, as a result of the decline in estrogens and the degradation of the gland, but the body may be fattening,2 and breast diseases and major clinical performance 2.1. The breast of the patient has cyclical swelling and stinging, and the patient has access to the mammogram form or the barbed-wire form, and the pain and knots are generally strong before the onset of the stratification and are reduced after the menstruation. 2.2. Breast cysts are also one of the most common breast diseases among women, resulting from the high expansion of breast catheters, with the vast majority of breast cysts with no clinical symptoms and some with breast pains and permeable swelling. 2.3. Breast growth is due mainly to gland growth at different levels of ovarian and endocrinological disorders, resulting in swelling that touches borders and does not contain membranes. The main clinical manifestation of breast growth is mammography, which is characterized by mammograms of various sizes. Most are women aged 30 to 40. Pain on either side or on both sides can be radiationed from a shoulder-backed armpit and can be altered by emotional changes and menstruation cycles. The reduction or disappearance of menstruation is due to ovarian disorders. Pathological changes are mainly due to gland cell growth, haematosis, oedema and catheter expansion, which does not have the cystic growth of cystology or disease. Breast growth, especially cystic growth, can cause heterogeneity and cancer, and is described as pre-cancer pathologies, requiring attention to repeated and regular surgical treatment if necessary. 2.4. Breast tumour diseases (1) tumoural mastoma, fibrous adenomas, fatomas, plastomas in the chest, all of which are mammary tumours. In general, there are no visible symptoms, most of them from the bottom of the bath are not adhesive and do not change the skin. Fibrous tumours occur more frequently, with single or multiple rounded parcels in the breast, with good activity, with skin, young women, aged 20 to 40. It can be diagnosed by a supplementary examination and surgically removed. (2) Breast cancer is a malignant tumour that endangers women ‘ s health in general and has become the female first killer in recent years. Incidence has gradually increased, with an increase of 10 times the age at which the disease occurs, mostly in the 35-55 age group, with a lower incidence in the 70 age group. There are some variations in the incidence rates from one region to another, both within and outside the country. The incidence is higher in developed countries and in modern major cities.

The main clinical manifestations are: (1) mammograms: individual (a few of them multiple) pain-free swellings occur in the breast, mostly on the outside of the breast, with different sizes, hard texture, unclear borders and poor activity. The part of the package that occurs can be immersed in fragrances, resulting in a skin dent – a dimple – at an early stage. In the case of breast cancer cells immersed in their skin, the lymphobes and the surrounding lymphoma are clogged with oedema, with a dosage of orange skin – called orange skin. It’s not early. 2 Breast changes: nipples can be removed, rotting, itching, condensing, fixed, etc. They can also grow rapidly as a result of swelling, a constriction of the nipples leading to a pathology, uplifting of the nipples or deflection to one side. 3 Lactation Spires: The emulsions are immersed in the blood of the nipples, most of which are single-sided, single-milk, and blood. 4 Symptoms of lymphomosis: due to the rapid growth of breast cancer tissues, leaching of lymphoma tissues and transfer to regional lymphoma knots, single or multiple lymphoma lymph nodes can be touched on the collarbone, lower and armpits, which combine into swelling. 5 Symptoms of blood movement: Cancer cell induction can be transmitted with blood to the lung, liver, bone, often to the spine, femur and pelvis, followed by corresponding symptoms. iii. The increase in breast milk among the high-prevalence population has continued for many years: Breast growth is a chronic disease, with chronic breast growth at a higher risk of becoming breast cancer. Frequent abortions: Multiple abortions can affect the hormonal level of women and increase the risk of breast cancer. Long-term use of hormonal or cosmetic drugs: Abuse of health care with estrogen may increase the risk of breast cancer. Family history with breast cancer: The risk of contracting breast cancer, especially in the immediate family, increases significantly. Non-lactation or long-term lactation: Women who are not breastfeeding or have long-term lactation, and women with long mammograms, may increase the risk of breast cancer. Obesity or overingestion of fat: Obesity and high fat diets may be associated with increased risk of breast cancer. Persons who are depressed, often angry and in a bad mood: psychological stress and negative emotions may affect endocrines and increase the risk of disease. Long-term exposure to radiation: frequent use of electronic products such as computers, mobile phones, etc. Persons who are single or infertility after marriage: the fertility situation is related to the risk of breast cancer and women who are single or infertility are at higher risk. Early or late menstruation: Both early and late menstruation are associated with increased risk of breast cancer.