RESUMEN
We describe the case of a 49-year-old woman who, after surgical treatment of breast cancer, developed axillary web syndrome (AWS) followed, 3 weeks later, by the appearance of soft and painless subcutaneous nodules along the cords and close to the flexure of the elbow. After tests (soft tissue and Doppler ultrasound), a dermal/subcutaneous or neoplastic cause was ruled out, although a cephalic and ulnar venous thrombosis was revealed. Anticoagulant medication was prescribed, with disappearance of the nodules 3-4 weeks later and improvement of AWS. The symptoms, clinical course, diagnostic tests, as well as the published evidence, helped to establish a diagnosis of AWS with subcutaneous nodules. AWS is an early complication after axillary surgery, which is well known among breast cancer professionals and whose diagnosis is based on clinical presentation. Its association with subcutaneous nodules is one of its rare variants and requires compulsory complementary studies to exclude other causes. Like AWS, nodules are believed to be due to lymphatic vessel thrombosis.