Swellings of The Jaw
Swellings of The Jaw
Swellings of The Jaw
Treatment:
resection of the tumour along with a margin of healthy bone
If no recurrence takes place after several months, bone graft
should be used to make good the mandibular defect
If tumour is very large, hemimandibulectomy
Mandibular defect is substituted by a prosthesis/ salistic rod
carved to the design and moulded over a K-wire
After a few months, prosthesis is replaced by a block bone graft
Osseous tumours
1. Benign tumours:
i. Fibro-osseous group
ii. Paget’s disease
iii. Osteoclastoma
iv. Giant-cell reparative granuloma
2. Malignant tumours of the maxilla:
v. Osteosarcoma
vi. Columnar cell carcinoma of the maxillary antrum
vii. Squamous cell carcinoma derived from
epithelium overlying the hard palate, tooth
socket or the gum
iv. Invasion of the maxilla by sarcoma of the
ethmoid
v. Burkitt’s tumour
3. Malignant tumours of the mandible:
i. Primary malignant neoplasm is extremely rare
ii. Secondary malignant tumour may occur from
a) Carcinoma of tongue
b) Floor of the mouth
c) Carcinoma of the lip
d) Metastatic involvement of the facial lymph nodes
which lie injuxtaposition of the mandible near the
groove for the facial artery
Fibro-osseous group
Jaws are mainly membrane bones. so fibro-osseous
dysplasia is often seen here
Tumour has varying amount of fibrous tissue and bone
If fibrous tissue element is more with myxomatous
degeneration, tumour will be soft in major parts
If only one tumour is found- monostotic fibrous
dysplasia
If the condition is diffuse, polyostotic fibrous dysplasia
If the tumour composed of solely bone and localised-
ivory osteoma
If this bony tumour is diffuse- leontiasis ossea
X- ray appeance of fibrous dysplasia are strips and
bubbles within the jaw
Ivory osteoma is a benign dense localised tumour
Clinical features:
Fibrous dysplasia is more often seen in the 1st /2nd
decade
Its growth stops when the individual is fully grown
Such tumour has been associated with dental sepsis
or some sort of oral sepsis
Treatment:
When individual is fully grown, excision of the
tumour is made under antibiotic cover
Osteoclastoma
• Extremely rare tumour in the jaw
• More seen in the lower jaw
• Occur under the gum as myeloid epulis
• Osteoclastoma, gaint celled reparative
granuloma and adamantinoma mimic one
another
Gaint celled reparative granuloma
• This lesion occurs due to haemorrhage within the
bone marrow
Pathology:
• Macroscopically: consists of opaque, semisolid, dark
red material
• Microcsopically: there are multinuclear gaint cells
which are few in number
Clinical features:
• More often between the ages of 10 and 25 years
• Females are more frequently involved
• Swelling is painless
• Often involves the mandible
• X-ray shows, round/oval area of radiotranslucency
• It expands and thins out the cortex , not perforate
Treatment:
• Thorough curettage through external incision is the
treatment of choice
• Bone cavity shouldn't be opened into the mouth
Adamntinoma Osteoclastoma Gaint cell reparative granuloma
X-ray Fine honey- comb Soap bubble Rounded/ oval translucent area
appearance With small loculi appearance with whivh expands the cortex
larger cysts