Primary intraosseous carcinoma occurring in the maxilla

상악골에 발생한 원발성 골내암종

  • Kim Mi-Ja (Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology, College of Dentistry, Seoul National University and Department of Dentistry, College of Medicine, Hallym University)
  • 김미자 (서울대학교 치과대학 구강악안면방사선학교실 및 한림대학교 의과대학 치과학교실)
  • Published : 2004.03.01

Abstract

Primary intraosseous carcinoma (PIOC) is a rare odontogenic carcinoma defined as a squamous cell carcinoma arising within a jaw having no initial connection with the oral mucosa, and presumably developing from residues of the odontogenic epithelium. A 56-year-old patient who complained of delayed healing after extraction of upper left central incisor visited our department. The conventional radiographs showed a bony destructive lesion with ill-defined margin and moth-eaten appearance. On the computed tomographic images, the lesion perforated the labial cortex of alveloar bone, elevated the left nasal floor superiorly, and perforated partially both nasal floor. The magnetic resonance images showed low signal intensity at T2 and Tl weighted images at the area and adjacent soft tissue. Histologically, there were irregular epithelial islands with cell atypia, nuclear hyperchromatism, pleomorphism, atypical mitosis. The final diagnosis was PIOC.

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