terminal ductal lobular unit (TDLU)
Each breast lobe is drained by a collecting duct terminating in the nipple. The collecting duct has several branches, which ends in a terminal ductal-lobular unit (TDLU), the basic functional and histopathological unit of the breast. The TDLU is composed of a small segment of the terminal duct and a cluster of ductules, which are the effective secretory units. The functional structures are surrounded by specialized connective tissue. A normal terminal ductal-lobular unit ranges from 1-4 mm.
The TDLU consists of the:
- extralobular terminal duct
- intralobular terminal duct
- lobule (functional unit of the breast)
Function
This is the most important structure in the breast. It is the glandular unit that produces milk.
Related pathology
It is postulated that most cancers and benign lesions arise in the terminal duct either inside or just proximal to the lobule. For example:
- ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)
- lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS)
- fibroadenoma of the breast
- breast cyst
- apocrine metaplasia of the breast
- adenosis of the breast
- epitheliosis of the breast
Siehe auch:
- Fibroadenom
- duktales in situ Karzinom der Mamma
- lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS)
- adenosis of the breast
- apocrine metaplasia of the breast