Calcification — What It Means on Your Imaging Report
Quick Answer
Calcification refers to small deposits of calcium in tissue that show up as bright white spots on imaging — most are harmless.
What Is Calcification?
Calcification occurs when calcium builds up in body tissue where it would not normally be found in large amounts. On imaging, these calcium deposits appear as bright white spots or specks because calcium is very dense and blocks X-rays and other imaging beams effectively.
Calcifications are extremely common and can happen for many reasons:
- Aging — calcium naturally deposits in tissues over time
- Prior injury or inflammation — the body may deposit calcium as part of the healing process
- Infections — old, healed infections sometimes leave behind calcified scars
- Normal wear and tear — calcification in blood vessels and joints becomes increasingly common with age
In radiology, calcifications are divided into two main categories based on size:
- Macrocalcifications — larger calcium deposits, usually benign. Common in aging breast tissue and blood vessels.
- Microcalcifications — tiny calcium specks, most often seen on mammograms. Most are benign, but certain patterns may need further evaluation.
When You Might See This on Your Report
Calcifications are found on many types of imaging:
- Mammograms — this is the most common context patients encounter. Breast calcifications are found on a significant percentage of mammograms, and the vast majority are benign. The radiologist will describe the pattern (scattered, clustered, linear) and assign a BI-RADS score.
- CT scans — calcifications in the coronary arteries (coronary artery calcification), aorta, lymph nodes, liver, spleen, and lungs are frequently seen.
- X-rays — calcified lymph nodes, vascular calcifications, and joint calcifications are common findings.
Your report may describe calcifications as "punctate" (tiny dots), "coarse" (large and chunky), "rim" (forming a shell around something), or "dystrophic" (forming at a site of prior damage).
Should I Be Worried?
Most calcifications are harmless. They are one of the most common incidental findings in medical imaging and are often a sign of normal aging or a healed prior condition.
For breast calcifications specifically:
- Scattered macrocalcifications — almost always benign. No further workup needed.
- Round or punctate microcalcifications — typically benign.
- Clustered, linear, or branching microcalcifications — these patterns may require further evaluation, such as additional mammogram views or a biopsy, because they can occasionally be associated with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). Your mammogram report will include a BI-RADS score that reflects the radiologist's level of concern.
For calcifications outside the breast (arteries, lungs, lymph nodes), most are benign and reflect prior infections, inflammation, or aging. Coronary artery calcification, however, can be an indicator of atherosclerosis (plaque buildup) and may prompt your doctor to discuss heart health.
What Should I Do Next?
- Check the context. Where the calcification is found matters. Breast calcification recommendations will be reflected in your BI-RADS score. Vascular calcifications may prompt a conversation about heart health.
- Read the Impression section of your report for the radiologist's assessment and any recommended follow-up.
- Follow any recommended imaging or biopsy. If the radiologist suggests additional views or a biopsy for breast calcifications, this is a precautionary measure — most biopsies return benign results.
- Discuss with your doctor how the finding fits into your overall health, especially if calcifications are found in your arteries or heart.
- Do not panic. Calcifications are one of the most common imaging findings and are overwhelmingly benign.