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Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature

Cemento-ossifying fibromas (COF) are benign lesions affecting the jaws and other craniofacial bones. They commonly affect adults between the third and fourth decade of life. Radiographically, they appear as well-defined unilocular or multilocular intraosseous masses, commonly in the premolar/molar r...

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Autores principales: Dalghous, Abdulbaset, Alkhabuli, Juma O
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: CoAction Publishing 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3078280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21503260
http://dx.doi.org/10.4176/061220
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author Dalghous, Abdulbaset
Alkhabuli, Juma O
author_facet Dalghous, Abdulbaset
Alkhabuli, Juma O
author_sort Dalghous, Abdulbaset
collection PubMed
description Cemento-ossifying fibromas (COF) are benign lesions affecting the jaws and other craniofacial bones. They commonly affect adults between the third and fourth decade of life. Radiographically, they appear as well-defined unilocular or multilocular intraosseous masses, commonly in the premolar/molar region of the mandible. The lesion is invariably encapsulated and of mixed radiolucent densities. The tumour may grow quite extensively, thus the term aggressive is some times applied. Their clinical, radiographical and histopathological features and those of fibro-osseous lesions are overlapping and may cause confusion in classification, diagnosis, and treatment. The histopathology is composed of fibrous tissues with calcified structures resembling bone or cementum. Surgical enucleation or resection is the treatment of choice. They are insensitive to radiotherapy and recurrences are uncommon. This case report presents a case of COF in 70 years old female patient that was asymptomatic. Clinically, there was an expansion of the buccal plate but not the lingual plate of the right mandible. The covering mucosa was normal and there was no tenderness or paraesthesia. Radiographically, the lesion extends superio-inferiory from the alveolar ridge to the area of inferior dental canal and mesiodistally from the premolar region to the retro-molar area. The lesion was of mixed radiolucent densities. The patient was followed up periodically for 5 years without any treatment. The patient continued to be asymptomatic with minimum changes. Occurrence of cemento-ossifying fibroma in patients over 60 years of age is unusual and had not been reported. The clinical, radiographic, histopathology and literature review are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-30782802011-04-18 Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature Dalghous, Abdulbaset Alkhabuli, Juma O Libyan J Med Case Report Cemento-ossifying fibromas (COF) are benign lesions affecting the jaws and other craniofacial bones. They commonly affect adults between the third and fourth decade of life. Radiographically, they appear as well-defined unilocular or multilocular intraosseous masses, commonly in the premolar/molar region of the mandible. The lesion is invariably encapsulated and of mixed radiolucent densities. The tumour may grow quite extensively, thus the term aggressive is some times applied. Their clinical, radiographical and histopathological features and those of fibro-osseous lesions are overlapping and may cause confusion in classification, diagnosis, and treatment. The histopathology is composed of fibrous tissues with calcified structures resembling bone or cementum. Surgical enucleation or resection is the treatment of choice. They are insensitive to radiotherapy and recurrences are uncommon. This case report presents a case of COF in 70 years old female patient that was asymptomatic. Clinically, there was an expansion of the buccal plate but not the lingual plate of the right mandible. The covering mucosa was normal and there was no tenderness or paraesthesia. Radiographically, the lesion extends superio-inferiory from the alveolar ridge to the area of inferior dental canal and mesiodistally from the premolar region to the retro-molar area. The lesion was of mixed radiolucent densities. The patient was followed up periodically for 5 years without any treatment. The patient continued to be asymptomatic with minimum changes. Occurrence of cemento-ossifying fibroma in patients over 60 years of age is unusual and had not been reported. The clinical, radiographic, histopathology and literature review are discussed. CoAction Publishing 2007-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3078280/ /pubmed/21503260 http://dx.doi.org/10.4176/061220 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Dalghous, Abdulbaset
Alkhabuli, Juma O
Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature
title Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature
title_full Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature
title_fullStr Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature
title_full_unstemmed Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature
title_short Cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. A case report and a review of literature
title_sort cemento-ossifying fibroma occurring in an elderly patient. a case report and a review of literature
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3078280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21503260
http://dx.doi.org/10.4176/061220
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