The pancreas is an organ that produces digestive enzymes and insulin. When its cells grow uncontrollably, it leads to cancer.
Invasive Ductal Carcinoma (IDC) is the most common type of breast cancer. It begins in the milk ducts and spreads beyond them into the surrounding breast tissue. “Invasive” means the cancer has spread into nearby tissues and may also reach lymph nodes or other parts of the body.
2. Types
Main subtypes of IDC:
IDC – Not Otherwise Specified (most common form)
Tubular carcinoma (slow-growing type)
Mucinous carcinoma
Medullary carcinoma
Papillary carcinoma
Cribriform carcinoma
All originate in the ducts and spread into surrounding breast tissue.
3. Symptoms
Symptoms depend on size, location, and stage:
New lump or hardness in the breast
Change in breast size or shape
Inward turning of the nipple
Bloody or clear nipple discharge
Dimpled or orange-peel texture of skin
Swelling in underarm lymph nodes
Breast pain or heaviness
Redness or warmth of breast skin
4. Causes / Risk Factors
Increasing age
Hormonal imbalance (excess estrogen)
Genetic mutations (BRCA1/BRCA2)
Early menstruation and late menopause
Late first pregnancy
Smoking and alcohol consumption
Obesity and poor diet
Radiation exposure
Chronic stress
5. Prevention
Regular self-breast examination
Annual mammography (as per age/risk)
Avoid smoking and alcohol
Maintain healthy body weight
Balanced diet and regular exercise
Proper sleep and stress management
Careful use of hormonal medicines
Genetic screening if high risk
6. Diet Guidelines (Pathya)
Supportive diet includes anti-inflammatory and immunity-boosting foods:
The pancreas is an organ that produces digestive enzymes and insulin. When its cells grow uncontrollably, it leads to cancer.
Invasive Ductal Carcinoma (IDC) is the most common type of breast cancer. It begins in the milk ducts and spreads beyond them into the surrounding breast tissue. “Invasive” means the cancer has spread into nearby tissues and may also reach lymph nodes or other parts of the body.
2. Types
Main subtypes of IDC:
IDC – Not Otherwise Specified (most common form)
Tubular carcinoma (slow-growing type)
Mucinous carcinoma
Medullary carcinoma
Papillary carcinoma
Cribriform carcinoma
All originate in the ducts and spread into surrounding breast tissue.
3. Symptoms
Symptoms depend on size, location, and stage:
New lump or hardness in the breast
Change in breast size or shape
Inward turning of the nipple
Bloody or clear nipple discharge
Dimpled or orange-peel texture of skin
Swelling in underarm lymph nodes
Breast pain or heaviness
Redness or warmth of breast skin
4. Causes / Risk Factors
Increasing age
Hormonal imbalance (excess estrogen)
Genetic mutations (BRCA1/BRCA2)
Early menstruation and late menopause
Late first pregnancy
Smoking and alcohol consumption
Obesity and poor diet
Radiation exposure
Chronic stress
5. Prevention
Regular self-breast examination
Annual mammography (as per age/risk)
Avoid smoking and alcohol
Maintain healthy body weight
Balanced diet and regular exercise
Proper sleep and stress management
Careful use of hormonal medicines
Genetic screening if high risk
6. Diet Guidelines (Pathya)
Supportive diet includes anti-inflammatory and immunity-boosting foods:
CHEMOTRIM+ SYP 2
HEPORYL+ SYP 1
FEMALTIN + SYP 1
TOXINOL + SYP 1
ANSOCURE CAP 2
TONER LIQUID 100 m 1
FORTEX PAK 450 grams 2
OMNI OIL 70 ml 1
Mouth Freshner 1
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