Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3174483 | Revue de Stomatologie et de Chirurgie Maxillo-faciale | 2009 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Our observation is unusual in its clinical presentation. Mandibular lymphomas most often present as a painless swelling, sometimes ulcerated in the mouth. They are very rarely diagnosed after an isolated hypoesthesia of V3. Lymphomas are the second most frequent head and neck lymphomas after epidermoid carcinomas, but the frequency seems to be increasing. In almost all the cases, they present as B-cell tumours of the DLBCL subtype in the WHO classification. Mandibular localizations account for only 0.6% of the cases. They are often misdiagnosed as a dental problem. The complete remission rate after chemotherapy ranges from 60 to 80% at one year. Nevertheless, the prognosis remains bad with a survival rate of only 50% at five years.
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Authors
O. Trost, C. Charon-Barra, P. Soichot, G. Moreau, P. Trouilloud, G. Malka,