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      Oral pyogenic granuloma: a review

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      Journal of Oral Science
      Nihon University School of Dentistry

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          Abstract

          Pyogenic granuloma is one of the inflammatory hyperplasias seen in the oral cavity. This term is a misnomer because the lesion is unrelated to infection and in reality arises in response to various stimuli such as low-grade local irritation, traumatic injury or hormonal factors. It predominantly occurs in the second decade of life in young females, possibly because of the vascular effects of female hormones. Clinically, oral pyogenic granuloma is a smooth or lobulated exophytic lesion manifesting as small, red erythematous papules on a pedunculated or sometimes sessile base, which is usually hemorrhagic. The surface ranges from pink to red to purple, depending on the age of the lesion. Although excisional surgery is the treatment of choice for it, some other treatment protocols such as the use of Nd:YAG laser, flash lamp pulsed dye laser, cryosurgery, intralesional injection of ethanol or corticosteroid and sodium tetradecyl sulfate sclerotherapy have been proposed. Because of the high frequency of pyogenic granuloma in the oral cavity, especially during pregnancy, and necessity for proper diagnosis and treatment, a complete review of published information and investigations about this lesion, in addition to knowledge about new approaches for its treatment is presented.

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          Metastatic tumours to the oral region. An overview.

          Metastatic tumours to the oral region are uncommon. There are more published cases of jawbone metastases than in oral soft tissues. The most common primary sources of metastatic tumours to the oral region are the breast, lung, kidney, bone and colon. The breast is the most common primary site for tumours metastasising to the jawbones, whereas the lung is the most common source for metastases to the oral soft tissues. In the jawbones, the common location of the metastatic lesions is the mandible, with the molar area being the most frequent involved site. In the oral soft tissues, the attached gingiva is the most common affected site followed by the tongue. In nearly 30% of cases, the metastatic lesion in the oral region is the first indication of an undiscovered malignancy at a distant site. The biological basis of the metastatic process is discussed.
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            Pitfalls in the histopathologic diagnosis of pyogenic granuloma

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              Pregnancy tumor An analysis

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Oral Science
                J Oral Sci
                Nihon University School of Dentistry
                1343-4934
                1880-4926
                2006
                2006
                : 48
                : 4
                : 167-175
                Article
                10.2334/josnusd.48.167
                17220613
                86ac2b19-8b0b-4315-aa2b-ce7259886ec0
                © 2006
                History

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