Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6059402 | Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology, and Endodontology | 2011 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundOsteochondroma at the level of the coronoid process is unusual, causing a slowly progressive facial asymmetry and limitation of mouth opening. Histologically, it is a bone tumor covered by a thin capsule of cartilage. We present a literature review of cases published to date and present a new case in which osteochondroma originating in the coronoid process was associated with the formation of a cyst at the body of the zygoma, necessitating the reconstruction of the body of the zygoma.Study designA 55-year-old woman had a bone tumor in the right malar region, producing a limitation in mouth opening. After preoperative computerized tomography, we decided to excise the lesion and pseudocyst with the use of a combined subciliary and coronal approach, reconstructing the body of the zygoma with a cortical chip of calvarian bone.ResultsThe patient regained normal mouth opening, without injury to the fronto-orbital branches of the facial nerve and no recurrence of the tumor to date.ConclusionsOsteochondroma is a slow-growing tumor that causes progressive facial asymmetry and limitation of mouth opening. The treatment of choice for symptomatic osteochondromas is surgical resection.