“…Intraoral perineuriomas are rare, and there have been only 19 reported cases of the intraneural type in this location (Ko et al, 2020; Schadel et al, 2019). Clinically, most of them are painless, slow‐growing submucosal nodules (da Cruz Perez et al, 2006), and the most frequently involved subsites were the tongue and the mandible (Schadel et al, 2019). Therefore, IPNs can be clinically misdiagnosed as other oral benign lesions, such as mucoceles, schwannomas, neurofibromas (Rocha et al, 2009), lymphangiomas, or fibrous hyperplasias, as the present case.…”