2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.bjoms.2009.10.004
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Treatment of mandibular glandular odontogenic cyst with immediate reconstruction: case report and 5-year follow-up

Abstract: Glandular odontogenic cysts of the jaw are rare with unusual histopathological features, well-defined limits, and a high recurrence rate when treated conservatively. We describe a 37-year-old white man with such a cyst of the right mandible that was resected, and at follow-up 5 years later there were no signs of recurrence.

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Cited by 11 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In this study, enucleation associated with peripheral osteotomy was performed due to three factors: patient choice, clinical and radiological diagnosis of a dentigerous cyst, and lesion size (17 × 12.5 mm). On the other hand, radical treatments, such as marginal resection, can sometimes be considered due to the biological behavior of GCO, particularly due to local aggressiveness and recurrence rates around 21-55% [15, 19, 33]. Some reports suggest that recurrence is more common in larger lesions, with cortical bone perforation and multilocular radiographic appearance [30, 32].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this study, enucleation associated with peripheral osteotomy was performed due to three factors: patient choice, clinical and radiological diagnosis of a dentigerous cyst, and lesion size (17 × 12.5 mm). On the other hand, radical treatments, such as marginal resection, can sometimes be considered due to the biological behavior of GCO, particularly due to local aggressiveness and recurrence rates around 21-55% [15, 19, 33]. Some reports suggest that recurrence is more common in larger lesions, with cortical bone perforation and multilocular radiographic appearance [30, 32].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The high rate of recurrence can be attributed to the thin lining, presence of microcysts, and tubular extensions of the cystic lining into the surrounding marrow which may escape clearance and high mitotic capacity of the cells very similar to OKC. [9,10] Although microcysts were seen in certain sections in case1, both cases showed an uneventful post-operative course with no evidence of recurrence. The involvement of almost all the teeth in the quadrant, extensive buccal cortical perforation, and palatal expansion, and close to complete obliteration of the maxillary sinus, however, highlights their aggressive behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Por otro lado, la saucerización se realizó en este caso debido al aspecto del quiste, con paredes gruesas, con un aspecto más bien de tumor, por lo que se pensó en ese momento que podría ser un queratoquiste (Lyrio et al, 2010), esto también debido a su recurrencia.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified