• Title/Summary/Keyword: Dental treatment prior to chemotherapy

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MICRODONTIA IN A CHILD TREATED WITH CHEMOTHERAPEUTIC AGENT (항암 화학치료를 받은 아동의 치아발육이상 : 증례 보고)

  • Kye, Hi-Ran;Lee, Jae-Ho;Kim, Seong-Oh;Sohn, Heung-Kyu
    • Journal of the korean academy of Pediatric Dentistry
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.146-150
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    • 1999
  • With the improved cure rates for childhood malignant conditions in the past decade, late effects of cancer therapy must be recognized to minimize their impact on the quality of life in long-term survivors. Chemoradiation therapy is a major part of pediatric oncology treatment and is implicated in causing tooth agenesis, microdontia, root shortening, early apical closure, and coronal hypocalcification. Dental development may be affected by illness, trauma, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy at any point prior to complete maturation. Treatment given during the first 3.5 years of life was more likely to affect the dental lamina and crown formation and result in a small tooth. Dental treatment affected by chemoradiation damage to developing teeth includes orthodontic tooth movement, prosthetic abutment consideration, periodontal health, space maintenance, requirement for home fluoride regimens to protect hypomineralized teeth, and enodontic procedures. Dental abnormalities are common in patients treated for cancer, and these children require aggressive dental follow-up. Meticulous surveillance may facilitate detection of abnormalities, enabling the dental practitioner to intervene earlier in promoting a more aggressive regimen of oral care, thus reducing the morbidity associated with dental sequelae of oncotherapy, specifically periodontal disease and malocclusion. In this case, we report microdontia of all permanent second premolar and second molar in an 8 year old boy treated with chemotherapeutic agents during period of active dental development(14 months to 38 months of age).

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ORAL MANIFESTATION AND TREATMENT OF ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA: A CASE REPORT (급성 골수성 백혈병의 구강 내 발현 및 치료: 증례 보고)

  • Kim, Ji-Youn;Min, Seung-Ki;Lim, Ho-Kyung;Suh, Jin-Won;Hwang, Soon-Jung
    • Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
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    • v.31 no.6
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    • pp.535-540
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    • 2009
  • Proliferation of abnormal hematopoietic cells with impaired differentiation, regulation and programmed cell death leads to leukemia. AML(acute myeloid leukemia) is a malignancy with malfunction of myeloid hematopoietic cells with acute behavior. The oral manifestations of the disease are posterior palate hemorrhage, gingival bleeding and gingival ulceration as a result of infection by normal oral flora and gingival infiltration by leukemic cells. A 49-year-old male patient was referred from local dental clinic. The patient was diagnosed with AML FAB M1 (acute myeloid leukemia French-American-British classification M1 myeloblastic leukemia without maturation). The oral infection focus was removed by a conservative treatment. 2 days after the dental treatment, the patient underwent chemotherapy. At 8-month follow-up, the overall outcome was excellent. Oral manifestations of AML are often the first indications of the malignancy. Therefore it is essential for dentists, especially oral and maxillofacial surgeons, to be aware of the diagnostic signs and complications associated with leukemia for better diagnosis and subsequent treatment and management.

Late reconstruction of oncological maxillary defect with microvascular free flap (상악결손부의 2차적 재건에 있어 유리 혈관화 피판의 적용)

  • Kwon, Tae-Geon;Kim, Chin-Soo
    • The Journal of the Korean dental association
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    • v.49 no.9
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    • pp.527-534
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    • 2011
  • Microvascular reconstruction of maxillary composite defect after oncologic resection has improved both esthetic and functional aspect of quality of life of the cancer patients. However, a lot of patients had prior surgery with radiation and/or chemotherapy as a part of comprehensive cancer treatment. Sometimes it is nearly impossible to find out adequate recipient vessel for maxillary reconstruction with microvascular anastomosis. Therefore long pedicle of the flap is needed to use distant neck vessels located far from the reconstruction site such as ipsilateral transverse cervical artery or a branch of contralateral external carotid artery. For this reason, although we know the treatment of the choice is osteocutaneous flap, it is difficult to use this flap when we need long pedicle with complex three dimensional osseous defect. Vascular option for these vessel-depleted neck patients can be managed by a soft tissue reconstruction with long vascular pedicle and additional free non-vascularized flap that is rigidly fixed to remaining skeletal structures. For this reason, maxillofacial reconstruction by vascularized soft tissue flap with or without the secondary restoration of maxillary bone with non-vascularized iliac bone can be regarded as one of options for reconstruction of profound maxillofacial composite defect resulted from previous oncological resection with chemo-radiotherapy.