## Breast Abscess Management: Stepwise Approach The clinical presentation describes a **confirmed breast abscess** (ultrasound-proven collection with loculation and internal echoes) in a lactating woman. ### Key Management Principle: **Drainage is mandatory** for any abscess >2 cm or with systemic toxicity. The approach depends on size and accessibility: | Size/Presentation | Management | |---|---| | <2 cm, no systemic signs | Antibiotics + frequent aspiration | | 2–4 cm | **Needle aspiration/catheter drainage ± antibiotics** | | >4 cm or failed needle drainage | Surgical incision and drainage | | Loculated/complex | Ultrasound-guided needle aspiration first | ### Why Option 1 (Correct): - **Ultrasound-guided needle aspiration** is the first-line drainage method for most breast abscesses (2–4 cm, loculated). - Allows culture, sensitivity, and targeted antibiotic therapy. - Less morbid than immediate surgical drainage. - If no improvement in 48–72 hours → escalate to surgical drainage. - Lactation can continue with safe antibiotics (amoxicillin-clavulanate, cephalosporins). ### High-Yield Pearl: **Antibiotics alone fail in ~50% of breast abscesses.** Drainage (needle or surgical) is essential; antibiotics are adjunctive only. **Mnemonic: "DRAIN before PAIN"** — Drainage prevents recurrence and complications (fistula, chronic abscess).
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.