@article {Gowharji430, author = {Lena Gowharji and Dana Smetherman and Brett Roberts}, title = {Body Art Confounding a Case of Breast Cancer}, volume = {17}, number = {4}, pages = {430--433}, year = {2017}, publisher = {Ochsner Journal}, abstract = {Background: Heavy metals in tattoo ink can be deposited in axillary lymph nodes, mimicking malignant calcifications. High-density foci in axillary lymph nodes can be the sequelae of a benign or malignant process.Case Report: A 34-year-old female presented with left breast discomfort. Mammography showed suspicious left breast calcifications for which biopsy revealed multicentric ductal carcinoma in situ. Imaging also showed high-density foci in her left axillary lymph nodes suspicious for nodal metastases; however, biopsy of the lymph nodes found the high-density foci to be pigment-laden histiocytes from tattoo ink metallic deposits.Conclusion: High-density foci in axillary lymph nodes on mammography can be evidence of calcifications or metal deposits and can be the manifestation of a benign or malignant process. Thus, this finding may warrant additional diagnostic workup (including mammography, ultrasound, and possibly biopsy) and correlation with clinical history.}, issn = {1524-5012}, URL = {https://www.ochsnerjournal.org/content/17/4/430}, eprint = {https://www.ochsnerjournal.org/content/17/4/430.full.pdf}, journal = {Ochsner Journal} }