Cases reported "Mouth Neoplasms"

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1/122. Solitary fibrous tumor of the oral cavity: an uncommon location for a ubiquitous neoplasm.

    Solitary fibrous tumor is an uncommon soft tissue tumor initially reported in the pleura but recently described in other sites of the body. To date, only 5 examples of oral solitary fibrous tumor have been reported. Here, we describe 2 additional cases of this tumor in the oral cavity. The tumors were composed of small to medium-sized spindle cells with bland cytologic features; these cells were haphazardly arranged in highly cellular sheets or ill-formed fascicles as well as in hypocellular areas with hyalinized blood vessels. Both tumors contained blood vessels with a hemangiopericytomalike appearance and expressed vimentin, CD34, and CD99. One case was also strongly positive for bcl-2. The diagnosis of solitary fibrous tumor may be difficult inasmuch as it shares a number of histologic features with other soft tissue tumors. awareness of its occurrence in the oral cavity is important so that confusion with other spindle cell neoplasms can be avoided.
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2/122. Benign mesenchymoma of the cheek: report of a case and review of the literature.

    Benign mesenchymoma is a soft tissue neoplasm that contains 2 or more differentiated mesenchymal components in addition to fibrous tissue. A rare case of benign mesenchymoma of the cheek in a 6-year-old boy is presented. The literature pertaining to mesenchymoma in the head and neck region is reviewed and discussed.
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3/122. Giant cell angiofibroma of the oral cavity: report of a new location for a rare tumor.

    Giant cell angiofibroma is a rare, soft tissue tumor that was first described in the orbit. Since then, several case reports have described this tumor in a number of extra-orbital sites, suggesting a wider anatomic distribution than is generally recognized. The tumor typically acts in a benign fashion with only rare local recurrences but no tendency to metastatic disease. Here, we report the first case of a giant cell angiofibroma in the oral cavity. The tumor presented as a soft tissue nodule on the buccal mucosa of a 60-year-old man. The histologic differential diagnosis included a number of other uncommon soft tissue neoplasms, including giant cell fibroblastoma, solitary fibrous tumor, and pleomorphic lipoma. The histologic and immunohistochemical features of this tumor and differentiation from other histologically similar soft tissue neoplasms are briefly discussed.
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4/122. Oral leiomyosarcoma in childhood. Report of a case with fine needle aspiration cytology.

    BACKGROUND: Leiomyosarcomas are rare tumors in the pediatric age group, and occurrence of this neoplasm in the oral cavity is exceedingly rare. This article highlights the fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology diagnosis of a case of recurrent oral leiomyosarcoma in childhood. CASE: An 11-year-old male noticed a swelling in the oral cavity near the left lower jaw. It was excised and diagnosed as leiomyosarcoma on histopathology. Four months later the patient presented with a progressive swelling in the oral cavity that extended to the lower jaw. The recurrent swelling was subjected to FNA, and its cytologic features were consistent with leiomyosarcoma. There was a very good initial response to chemotherapy and radiation therapy. However, because of noncompliance with advice for further therapy, the patient had a second local recurrence and dissemination of the disease to the skeletal system, abdomen and thorax. FNA cytology diagnosis of the second locally recurrent lesion and abdominal mass were consistent with leiomyosarcoma. Immunocytochemical staining revealed a positive reaction in the cytoplasm of tumor cells for vimentin and desmin in the FNA smear and paraffin section, respectively. CONCLUSION: Fine needle aspiration cytology is a useful technique for detection of recurrence and metastasis during follow-up of childhood oral leiomyosarcoma.
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5/122. Epstein-Barr virus-associated high-grade anaplastic plasmacytoma in a renal transplant patient.

    Allograft transplant patients have an increased risk of developing polyclonal or monoclonal lymphoproliferative disorders, but high-grade anaplastic plasmacytomas are extremely rare in these patients. We present a renal transplant patient who developed multiple extramedullary high-grade anaplastic plasmacytomas in the oral cavity, the left maxillary antrum, the scalp, the thigh and the upper abdominal wall with no evidence of diffuse bone marrow infiltration. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) mRNA transcripts were detected within the myeloma cells by in situ hybridization using EBER1-2 probes. Following discontinuation of immunosuppression applied, the patient was treated with a cyclophosphamide-prednisone regimen followed by local irradiation, and a complete remission was achieved within four weeks. We concluded that EBV-associated high-grade anaplastic plasmacytomas constitute one more type of post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder, and that despite their characterization as highly malignant neoplasms, their clinical behavior is not always aggressive.
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6/122. Leiomyosarcomas of the oral cavity: an unusual topographic subset easily mistaken for nonmesenchymal tumours.

    AIMS: Oral leiomyosarcoma is rare and poorly documented. We aimed to characterize these lesions clinicopathologically in order to facilitate their distinction from other spindle cell neoplasms in the oral cavity. methods AND RESULTS: Ten cases of oral leiomyosarcoma were retrieved and studied histologically and immunohistochemically. Clinical data were obtained from referring pathologists and prior literature concerning 46 comparable cases was reviewed. Nine out of 10 cases occurred in adults; 50% arose in the jaws and four showed bone involvement. Histological appearances were similar to leiomyosarcomas elsewhere. In addition to myogenic markers, two cases were also keratin-positive. Four patients developed local recurrence or metastatic disease and three died of tumour (median follow-up 37 months). CONCLUSIONS: leiomyosarcoma is under-recognized in the mouth, often being mistaken for a spindle-celled epithelial neoplasm. Aside from an unusual but infrequent tendency to spread to lymph nodes and a location-specific differential diagnosis, its clinicopathological features are comparable to leiomyosarcomas at other locations.
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7/122. Supernumerary ring chromosomes derived from the long arm of chromosome 12 as the primary cytogenetic anomaly in a rare soft tissue chondroma.

    Supernumerary ring chromosomes varying with respect to both size and number were found as the primary cytogenetic anomaly in a rare benign soft tissue chondroma resected from the floor of the mouth of a 3-year-old girl. Reverse fluorescence in situ hybridization paint probes prepared by polymerase chain reaction from microdissected rings produced fluorescent signal over two large but discontinuous parts of the chromosome 12 long arm, subdivided into four regions. This case expands the spectrum of mesenchymal neoplasms in which ring chromosomes have been described as the primary genetic anomaly. A review of the literature reporting similar findings in other soft tissue tumors further supports the possibility that low-level amplification of chromosome 12 long-arm regions may contribute to abnormal cellular proliferation in a variety of mesenchymal tumors. Genes implicated in the control of the cell cycle such as sarcoma amplified sequence (SAS), the human homolog of the murine double-minute type 2 gene (MDM-2), proto-oncogenes CHOP/GADD153, GLI, A2MR, cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK4), and the high mobility group (HMGIC) gene implicated in mesenchymal tumorigenesis are all located on the long arm of chromosome 12. Chromosomal abnormalities involving the 12q13-q15 region are associated with a wide range of benign soft tissue tumors and sarcomas.
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8/122. Solitary fibrous tumour of the oral cavity: clinicopathological and immunohistochemical characterization of three cases.

    Solitary fibrous tumour (SFT) is an uncommon mesenchymal neoplasm rarely located in the oral cavity. To characterize further oral SFT, we describe three new cases. Each tumour originated in the buccal mucosa of a middle-aged/elderly patient. Histological examination showed well-circumscribed tumours with densely cellular areas alternating with hypocellular areas in a variedly collagenous, vascular stroma. mast cells were abundant. The spindle-shaped, neoplastic cells immunostained strongly for CD34 antigen and vimentin and weakly for bcl-2, but not for epithelial cell markers, alpha-smooth muscle actin, or neurofilament or S-100 proteins. Compatible with the virtual absence of mitoses and of marked nuclear atypia, the overall frequency of proliferating cells expressing Ki-67 was low. The expression of CD34 was useful in the differential diagnosis. The consistent location in the cheek and expansion of one tumour after local trauma does not preclude a traumatic element in the development of oral SFT.
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9/122. Melanotic neuroectodermal tumor of infancy: report of two cases and review of literature.

    Melanotic neuroectodermal tumor of infancy (MNTI) is a rare, distinctive neoplasm containing melanin; it primarily affects the maxilla of the infants during the first year of life. Approximately 150 instances of this tumor are reported in the medical literature. Genesis of the tumor is obscure and the diagnosis is challenging for the pathologist. Two cases operated by the first author are presented, and the diagnostic features and treatment alternatives of MNTI discussed.
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10/122. meningioma presenting as an intraoral mass in a patient with neurofibromatosis type 1.

    A 77-year-old woman with neurofibromatosis type 1 presented with ill-fitting dentures due to intraoral extension of a right temporal fossa mass. Computed tomographic scanning demonstrated that the masticator space mass bowed the zygomatic arch and remodeled the lateral orbit and maxillary sinus walls, findings that were consistent with the clinical diagnosis of a neurofibroma with possible malignant transformation. However, light microscopic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural examination of tissue from an incisional biopsy specimen were diagnostic of meningioma. This case illustrates that the clinicopathologic differential diagnosis of an enlarging mass in patient with neurofibromatosis should include sporadic, unrelated neoplasms as well as tumors known to be associated with the syndrome.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = neoplasm
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