“…OSSC most commonly develops on the sites such as lips, tongue and floor of the mouth, while some OSCCs arise in apparently normal mucosa and some may be preceded by clinically obvious premalignant lesions like leukoplakia and erythroplakia (4,5). Typically, OSCC often presents as an ulcer with prominent exophytic margins or fissures (6). It can also develop as a lump, an enlarged, hard, or fixated cervical lymph node, a white or mixed white and red lesion, an extraction socket that won't heal, or a red lesion (erythroplakia) (7,8).…”