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1.
Malignant tumours rarely metastasize to the oral cavity. When they do, such metastases may arise from various locations including the lung, breast, kidney, prostate and colon. Soft tissue oral metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma is extremely rare, and limited information exists regarding the presentation and work-up of metastatic gastric carcinoma into the oral soft tissue. We present an unusual case of a 70-year-old man and review the records of 17 cases of soft tissue oral metastasis from gastric carcinoma in the English and Japanese literature.Metastatic lesions from all sources are typically diagnosed in patients in their fifth to seventh decade, with the most common sites of soft tissue metastasis being the gingiva and alveolar mucosa of the mandible. In almost one quarter of patients a metastatic lesion in the oral cavity is the first manifestation of an undiscovered primary malignancy. They grow rapidly and tend to bleed and ulcerate. Because of their rarity and clinical characteristics, gastric metastatic tumours in the oral cavity are challenging to diagnose. Inflammatory and reactive lesions are common in the oral cavity and they should be considered in the differential diagnosis. Careful examination with a high degree of clinical suspicion, as well as a multidisciplinary approach is suggested.  相似文献   

2.
Metastatic tumors to the oral cavity are uncommon. Most of these cases involve the mandible or the maxilla. Rarely, metastasis occurs to the oral soft tissues from a distant primary tumor. The lung and breast are the most common primary sites. It is extremely rare to have an oral soft-tissue metastasis from a carcinoma of the colon. A case of primary adenocarcinoma of the colon with metastasis to the soft tissues of the mouth is described. Three similar case reports are reviewed. A metastatic lesion to the oral cavity could be the first indication of the presence of a primary tumor.  相似文献   

3.
Metastatic tumors involve the oral cavity, and the most common primary sites are the breast and lung. Most cases affect the mandible and maxilla in that order, although some of them can be located in the soft perioral tissues. We report the case of a 62-year-old male who had been diagnosed with sigmoid adenocarcinoma with nodal and liver metastasis, who presented 6 months later with a gingival polypoid tumor, at first considered as a primary neoplasm of gingiva, that was diagnosed in a biopsy as metastatic intestinal adenocarcinoma. The histological evaluation is essential to separate adenocarcinoma from the commoner in this site squamous cell carcinoma, and the immunohistochemical techniques are useful to distinguish metastatic tumor versus primary adenocarcinoma from the minor salivary glands of the area. The intraoral spread of a disseminated neoplasm is generally a sign of bad prognosis, although a longer survival can be expected if a radical surgical treatment of a solitary metastasis is carried out.  相似文献   

4.
This article describes a pooled analysis of 41 Korean patients with metastatic oral tumours. The data reviewed are from Korean dental and medical case reports published between 1983 and 2004. The mean age was 55.2 years, and the male-to-female ratio was 1.9:1. There were more metastases in the jawbone than in oral soft tissues. The lung was the most common primary site for jawbone metastases, whereas the liver was for those of oral soft tissues. In contrast to reports in Western literature of the breast being the most common primary site, the liver was the most common primary site, followed by the lung and thyroid. These differences may be caused by a relatively high incidence rate of hepatocellular carcinoma in Korea.  相似文献   

5.
Metastatic tumours to the oral region are uncommon. There are more published cases of jawbone métastases than in oral soft tissues. The most common primary sources of metastatic tumours to the oral region are the breast, lung, kidney, bone and colon. The breast is the most common primary site for tumours metastasising to the jawbones, whereas the lung is the most common source for métastases to the oral soft tissues. In the jawbones, the common location of the metastatic lesions is the mandible, with the molar area being the most frequent involved site. In the oral soft tissues, the attached gingiva is the most common affected site followed by the tongue. In nearly 30% of cases, the metastatic lesion in the oral region is the first indication of an undiscovered malignancy at a distant site. The biological basis of the metastatic process is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis to the jaw and soft tissue of the oral cavity is a rare phenomenon. A case of metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma to the mandible is described. A review of the literature showed that only 19 such cases have been reported so far. As severe haemorrhage may occur during surgical removal of these metastases, it is advisable to carry out fine needle aspiration biopsy when metastasis from a hepatocellular carcinoma is suspected.  相似文献   

7.
Metastases in the oral cavity are rare lesions which represent approximately 1% of all malignant neoplasms in the oral cavity. Oral metastases are located in the mandible 80-90% on average, the maxilla location being rarer. Metastases in mouth soft tissue are also rare, and within these it is on the gums where they more frequently occur. Primary tumours which metastasize to mouth are most commonly: lung, breast and kidney. Oral cavity metastases appear as a result of distant disease spreading and show wrong prognosis, with short survival. Here we present a clinical case of a patient diagnosed with esophagus adenocarcinoma which presented metastasis in upper-left maxillary bone.  相似文献   

8.
Prostate cancer is the cause of 10% of cancer-related deaths in males in the United States. Metastases are found late in the course of the disease. Metastatic tumors of the oral cavity are rare, representing about 1% of oral tumors and affect jaws much more frequently than soft tissues. Metastatic prostate cancer tends to involve the bones of the axial skeleton. In a recent review, 22 cases of metastases to the jawbones from prostate cancer were found in 390 cases. On the other hand, only 1 case of a metastasis to the oral soft tissues was reported. The authors describe the second case of oral soft tissue metastasis from a prostate cancer. The metastatic lesion was located in the gingiva. Clinicians should be aware of oral soft tissue metastases since they can be the first sign of a not yet diagnosed malignant tumor and they can be very easily confused with several different benign lesions.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: Oral metastatic tumours are uncommon and account for approximately 1% of malignant oral neoplasms. RESULTS: If the cases where the oral location is in the jawbone, with secondary invasion to the oral soft tissue, are excluded, only 10 cases of gingival metastasis from hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have been previously reported in the literature. The clinicopathologic features of an HCC with gingival metastasis are reported. Six months after the multicentric HCC and alcoholic cirrhosis was diagnosed, a 65-year-old male patient presented a rapidly growing, lobulated and reddish exophytic lesion that was located in the gum in the incisal region of the upper jaw. The lesion was excised, and the final diagnosis of gingival metastasis of the HCC was established. Diagnostic investigations did not show any evidence of other metastatic lesions. This article describes a case with solitary metastasis from HCC in the gingiva, an event that, to our knowledge, has not been previously published. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical appearance of isolated gingival metastasis from HCC in the present case mimicked a pyogenic granuloma.  相似文献   

10.
Breast cancer continues to be the second most common cancer among women, after nonmelanoma skin cancer; in the United States, there is an average lifetime risk of 11% for developing a breast malignancy. Metastatic tumors from distant primary foci to the maxillofacial (MF) region are reported to account for only 1% of all MF malignancies, usually with grave prognosis. In the MF region, the bones more frequently involved in metastasis are the mandible, maxilla, temporal bone, frontal bone, and malar bone; the soft tissues more affected are gingiva, parotid gland, tongue, submandibular gland, and cheek. We describe a unique case of a solitary mass found in the body of the right zygoma, revealing a metastasis from breast cancer. According to the literature, the zygomatic complex is a very unusual site for metastasis; we found only 4 cases of metastatic localization from lung, rectum, liver, and uterine cancer. In MF region, oral and nasal cavity has been described as atypical sites of metastasis from breast cancer; this is to our knowledge the first recorded instance of malar metastasis from breast cancer.  相似文献   

11.
Many malignant tumours other than squamous cell carcinoma may present in the oral cavity. Melanomas of the oral cavity are usually pigmented, aggressive tumours associated with a poor prognosis. Neoplasms of the minor salivary glands have a greater tendency to be malignant than those of the major glands, and some exhibit a predilection for occurring in the mouth. Many types of connective tissue malignant tumours (sarcomas) may arise in the mouth, including soft-tissue cancers and lesions of hematologic cells such as lymphoma, whereas osteosarcoma is the most common malignancy of the hard tissues found in the mouth. Cancers from distant organs such as breast, lung and prostate may metastasize to the oral cavity. This paper presents a brief overview of nonsquamous cell oral cancers, with emphasis on those most likely to be encountered by the practising dentist.  相似文献   

12.
Soft tissue chondroma of the cheek   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Soft tissue chondromas are rare benign tumours unrelated to bone that arise primarily in the distal extremities. Lesions in the soft tissues of the oral cavity are extremely rare although several condromatous lesions have been reported in the tongue. A case is presented of a chondroma arising in the buccal mucosa. It was composed of a lobulated mass of myxoid tissue showing central areas of chondroid differentiation. Immunocytochemistry confirmed the lesion to be mesenchymal and not epithelial in origin. In the differential diagnosis it is important to exclude chondromatous change in a pleomorphic adenoma and also the possibility of a metastasis from an osseous chondrosarcoma.  相似文献   

13.
Ameloblastomas are benign tumors of odontogenic epithelial origin. There is a high incidence of local recurrence associated with these tumors, and distant metastasis is rare. A review of the English literature shows that there have been 41 prior reports of pulmonary metastases from ameloblastomas of the oral cavity. We present another case of ameloblastoma metastatic to the lung and review the histopathology and mechanism of metastatic spread.  相似文献   

14.
Metastasis of malignant tumors to the oral cavity is rare. The authors report a case of thyroid carcinoma with mandibular osteoblastic metastasis. An 83-year-old female presented with lower jaw swelling and pain. An elastic hard subcutaneous mass was observed in the median mandible. X-ray images confirmed a tumor lesion with periosteal reaction spreading radially from the mandible. A biopsy revealed nests of large, polygonal tumor cells growing in a supporting fibrovascular framework. The patient's anamnesis included thyroid carcinoma with lung metastasis, 2 years ago, treated by total enucleation of the thyroid and excision of the superior lobe of the left lung. Biopsy, primary and metastatic tumor samples all tested positive for thyroglobulin, suggesting a thyroid follicular epithelial origin. Mandibular metastasis of poorly differentiated carcinoma of the thyroid gland was diagnosed. Consent for further treatment was not obtained. The patient died 1 year and 7 months later.  相似文献   

15.

Background

Leiomyosarcoma is rare in the oral cavity, where it may arise as primary, radiation-associated, or metastatic tumor. This article reports two cases of oral leiomyosarcoma, discussing the range of clinicopathological features and the significance of these presentations.

Case report

One case is a radiation-associated leiomyosarcoma arising in the tongue of a 71-year-old male occurring 22?years after radiation therapy for tonsil squamous cell carcinoma that was surgically treated. The other one is a mandible metastasis from a retroperitoneal widespread leiomyosarcoma in a 69-year-old man, who was treated by surgery and chemotherapy but died from the disease.

Discussion

Post-radiotherapy sarcomas of the oral cavity and oral metastasis from soft tissue sarcomas are very uncommon, but based on patient??s clinical history, they should be considered by oral health care providers in order to allow an early diagnosis and proper and timely management. Finally, to the best of our knowledge, this seems to be the first reported case of tongue leiomyosarcoma arising in a previously irradiated field.  相似文献   

16.
Metastatic carcinoma to the oral tissues and jaws: a study of 25 cases   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Y T Wu 《中华口腔医学杂志》1990,25(5):258-61, 317
In a series of 2,409 oral and jaw malignant tumors, 25 are metastatic account for 1% of malignant tumors in these regions. The commonest sites of the primary tumors were uterus and thyroid (5 cases each), followed by lung and liver (4 cases each), breast and stomach (2 cases each), femur, kidney and esophagus (1 case each) Among 25 cases, 13 occurred in oral soft tissues (12 in gingiva and 1 lip) and 12 in the jaws Alterations in sensation of the lip was the commonest oral symptoms when the metastatic tumors occurred in the mandible. On the radiograms, osteolytic destruction (9/12) was more common than osteogenic (2/12) or cyst-like change (1/12). In the patients with metastatic tumor of oral soft tissues, the bone may be unchanged (4/10), or involved similar to those in carcinoma of gingiva (4/10) or periodontal diseases (2/10).  相似文献   

17.
Three squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) cell lines established from oral cancer, seven specimens of SCC and three of adenoid cystic carcinomas taken from the oral cavity during operations were transplanted into the tongues of nude mice. Metastases to the regional lymph nodes and the lungs were examined histologically. We were able to transplant every cell line or specimen of tissue into the tongue of nude mice, and found that cancer transplanted in the tongue invaded diffusely to the surrounding tissues without forming a capsule, and that the mode of invasion of the transplanted SCC was similar to that of the biopsy specimen of the patient from whom the material had been obtained. We also found that all three of the SCC cell lines, 3 of the 7 SCC specimens and 2 of the 3 adenoid cystic carcinoma tissues metastasized to the regional lymph node. SCC did not metastasize to the lung, but in two of the three adenoid cystic carcinomas we did see micrometastases to the lung. The study indicates that this method can be used as a model of metastasis in oral squamous cell carcinoma and adenoid cystic carcinoma to show the stages of metastasis in cancer.  相似文献   

18.
A case of metastatic osteosarcoma in the submental vestibule of the oral cavity and the lung is described in an 18-year-old male with primary osteosarcoma occurring in the sacrum. Dissemination of osteosarcoma to other organs, especially early to the lung, is common, but its metastasis to the oral mucosa has been rarely reported. The patient presented 6 years after initial diagnosis, suggesting the need for careful long-term follow-up of patients with osteosarcoma. This case also illustrates that immunohistochemical staining of osteocalcin is useful to confirm the histological diagnosis of oral soft-tissue metastasis.  相似文献   

19.
Large cell carcinoma of the lung metastatic to the mandibular gingiva   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
BACKGROUND: Although metastases of malignant tumors to the jaws are not unusual, metastases to the gingival soft tissues are relatively rare. METHODS: The clinicopathologic features of a metastatic tumor in the mandibular gingiva originating from lung cancer are described. The patient, a 61-year-old man, was admitted to the hospital with complaints of bloody sputum and chest pain while coughing. The patient's chest radiograph showed an abnormal mass in the left upper lobe. After admission, the patient noticed a swelling of the right mandibular gingiva. Histological and immunohistochemical analysis for tumors of the gingiva and the lung were performed. RESULTS: Radiographic examination did not indicate involvement of the underlying bone. The histopathological findings showed that the gingival tumor consisted of a large cell carcinoma, and the mass of the upper lobe displayed the same histology as that found in the gingiva. Immunohistochemical investigation of the gingival tumor revealed similar results to those found in the mass of the lung. Based on the clinicopathologic findings, this case was diagnosed as primary lung cancer with the gingival tumor deemed metastatic. Multiple metastases were found in areas other than the oral cavity; radiation and chemotherapy for the gingival tumor were performed due to persistent bleeding and pain. CONCLUSIONS: The resemblance of this gingival mass to an inflammatory lesion demonstrates the need for a detailed examination. This case also emphasizes the need to evaluate positive treatment needed to relieve complications in the mouth, even if the prognosis of the primary tumors remains unfavorable.  相似文献   

20.
A report of a case of intra-oral superficial angiomyxoma of a middle aged Caucasian female. Angiomyxomas are distinctive soft tissue tumours associated with a high risk of local recurrence but lack metastatic potential. Only one intra-oral case [Chen YK, Lin LM, Lin CC, Yan YH. Myxoid tumor of the oral cavity with features of superficial angiomyxoma: report of a case. J Oral Maxillofac Surg 1998;56:379-82] appears to have been reported in the English language.  相似文献   

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