RESULTS:A total of 374 patients having undergone 406 operations was identified. Their ages varied from 14 to 94 years (mean = 57.4 years), with 255 men (68.2%), and 295 out 366 Caucasian (80.6%). A majority had tumors of the tongue and/ or floor of mouth (55.6%), while 20.3% had lip cancer. Squamous cell carcinoma was found in 90.3%, and glandular carcinoma in 4%. T4 tumors in 39.6%, Tis or T1 lesions in 15.2% of all patients. Nearly 62% had no regional metastases, and the relative incidence in young patients (40 years or younger) reached 8.6%. CONCLUSION: In spite of the predominance of locally advanced tumors, a majority of patients had no neck metastases. The 31.8% incidence in females indicates an increasing incidence of oral cavity cancer among women when compared to previous periods at the same institution.
KEYWORDS: Head and neck neoplasms. Mouth neoplasms. Neoplasm metastasis. Population at risk. Epidemiology.Cancer of the oral cavity represents 2.6% of all malignancies affecting the Brazilian population according an estimate from the Brazilian National Cancer Institute (INCa) for 2003. Oral cancer is the eighth most common cancer in Brazil and occupies the sixth place when only men are considered. Regarding mortality, a total of 2.8% of deaths by cancer was due to malignancies in the mouth, which places oral cancer in the ninth place for mortality among all malignant tumors.
Schwannomas should be treated surgically because of its growing potential, leading to local and neural compression symptoms. When possible, enucleation, which was employed in 10 patients of this series, is the recommended surgical option, allowing neural function preservation or restoration in most instances. This is especially important in the head and neck, where denervation may have a significant impact on the quality of life.
First-bite syndrome (FBS) is described as a complication of parapharyngeal space surgery and consists of short-term pain in the parotid or mandibular region at the start of each meal, usually on the first bite and improving with subsequently each bite. The pathogenesis is related to a selective sympathetic denervation of the parotid gland and its treatment involves dietary modifications, medical treatment or even surgery, all with poor results. FBS is often undervalued and misdiagnosed, yet it is a pathology that may interfere with the patient's quality of life. We report two patients who underwent major cervical oncologic surgeries. One patient was subject to extended radical neck dissection into the parapharyngeal space and the other patient ligation of the external carotid artery, which post-operatively developed into FBS unresponsive to the medical treatment instituted. During external adjuvant radiotherapy, both had an unexpected FBS improvement, remaining asymptomatic after 7 and 10 months of follow-up. In this study, we discuss why FBS is misdiagnosed in oncologic patients, the possible pathophysiological mechanisms of radiotherapy and its plausibility as a new modality of treatment in selected cases.
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