“…Malignant tumors of tongue are rare in childhood, but they do occur and have to be ruled out [22]. Reported cases showed many different histopathologic diagnoses as: benign epithelial cyst (mucous cyst) [8], thyroglossal duct cyst [12,16], ectopic thyroid [4], heterotopic gastric cyst [13], enterocystoma [7], dermoid cyst [20] bronchogenic cyst [3], cyst of foregut origin [24], polyp, chronic inflammatory mass, developmental nodules, pyogenic granuloma [2], hamartoma, squamous papilloma, cavernous hemangioma, vascular malformation, teratoma [15], lipoma [1], nerve sheath myxoma [19], leiomyoma [11], myofibromas and myofibromatosis [6], glial choristoma [21], congenital foregut duplication cysts [5], osseous choristoma, congenital cystadenoma [10], congenital granular cell tumor [17], and diffuse lesions as macroglossia and massively infiltrating congenital lymphatic malformation [18].…”