Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks, folks. It is the rubbery lump that pp also describes. Maybe we’ll just do his annual exam a little early. I don’t want to freak my son out or make him worry that if he tells me about normal puberty body worries I’ll haul him off to the doctor. But I’ll take him soon.
My son just had a body-changes-in-puberty-what-to-expect class at school and this wasn’t mentioned. I’d never heard of it and neither had my husband...but 50 percent of boys get it. Poor dudes, can you imagine worrying you are growing breasts or have cancer and not knowing it is normal? And no one tells you?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks, folks. It is the rubbery lump that pp also describes. Maybe we’ll just do his annual exam a little early. I don’t want to freak my son out or make him worry that if he tells me about normal puberty body worries I’ll haul him off to the doctor. But I’ll take him soon.
My son just had a body-changes-in-puberty-what-to-expect class at school and this wasn’t mentioned. I’d never heard of it and neither had my husband...but 50 percent of boys get it. Poor dudes, can you imagine worrying you are growing breasts or have cancer and not knowing it is normal? And no one tells you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11 year old son came to me to say he has a lump under his nipple, and it’s sore. I checked, and he does. A hard lump about half the diameter of his (small, skinny boyish) areola. I Googled, and half of boys develop breast tissue during puberty. I’m trying to not worry about it, and I’ll take him to the ped soon, but wondered if what he is experiencing is in the range of typical. The websites seemed to indicate it was visible, and looks like man boobs. I have a skinny boy, and this is a lump of firm tissue right below the nipple so where I assume puberty hormone impacted tissue should be. Anyone been there done that?
I don't know anything about this, but I would treat the lump as if it were more alarming than a lump in a woman's breast.
My understanding is that breast cancer in men is much more aggressive than breast cancer in women.
I think you should go on the Health forum here and ask people there for ideas about how to proceed.
Anonymous wrote:My 11 year old son came to me to say he has a lump under his nipple, and it’s sore. I checked, and he does. A hard lump about half the diameter of his (small, skinny boyish) areola. I Googled, and half of boys develop breast tissue during puberty. I’m trying to not worry about it, and I’ll take him to the ped soon, but wondered if what he is experiencing is in the range of typical. The websites seemed to indicate it was visible, and looks like man boobs. I have a skinny boy, and this is a lump of firm tissue right below the nipple so where I assume puberty hormone impacted tissue should be. Anyone been there done that?