Florian Dudde, Filip Barbarewicz, Wilken Bergmann, Adrian Zu Knyphausen, Kai-Olaf Henkel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Odontomas are among the most common odontogenic tumors and are generally considered as hamartomatous odontogenic lesions. These tumors can be histopathologically divided into complex odontomas and compound odontomas based on their composition. Odontomas show a slow growing behavior and typically lack characteristic symptoms. The standard surgical treatment for large odontogenic tumors is a mandibular (continuity) resection followed by primary or secondary plastic reconstruction.
Case report: A 22-year-old male presented to the Department of maxillofacial surgery with an increasing feeling of pressure in the left mandible. An orthopantomogram revealed a large complex odontoma rg 038. Instead of mandible continuity resection an alternative minimally invasive technique/approach (intraoral) with a trapezoidal bone flap for the enucleation of an odontoma of the mandibular angle with subsequent flap reimplantation and osteosynthesis was performed.
Conclusion: Surgical enucleation of large mandibular odontoma with a continuity resection through an extraoral approach represents the surgical standard treatment of this entity. The present case report describes an alternative minimally invasive technique/approach. This technique may reduce surgical risks of the continuity resection through an extraoral approach (nerve damage, scarring) and can improve the long-term stability of the mandible by bone preservation.
期刊介绍:
IN VIVO is an international peer-reviewed journal designed to bring together original high quality works and reviews on experimental and clinical biomedical research within the frames of physiology, pathology and disease management.
The topics of IN VIVO include: 1. Experimental development and application of new diagnostic and therapeutic procedures; 2. Pharmacological and toxicological evaluation of new drugs, drug combinations and drug delivery systems; 3. Clinical trials; 4. Development and characterization of models of biomedical research; 5. Cancer diagnosis and treatment; 6. Immunotherapy and vaccines; 7. Radiotherapy, Imaging; 8. Tissue engineering, Regenerative medicine; 9. Carcinogenesis.