When it is necessary to evaluate dental structures, the typical method is to obtain intraoral or panoramic X-rays at specialized dental clinics. However, in the daily practice of head and neck radiology, or even general radiology, it is common to encounter clinical situations or examination findings related to dental problems that should not be ignored. Because such problems can often be responsible for the clinical complaints of patients, this review aims to assist radiologists in identifying and describing common dental conditions on computed tomography of paranasal sinuses, face, and neck. It is important for radiologists to have knowledge of dental arch anatomy and its relationships with facial structures, as well as of major dental pathologies, including periapical sclerotic lesions, odontogenic cysts, fistulas, and abscesses, together with knowledge of incidental findings without clinical repercussions, which should be easily identified and stressed by the radiologist when necessary. The imaging methods most commonly used in evaluation of paranasal sinuses and face are computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging. Those methods allow radiologists to recognize and become familiar with the main dental findings. The description of such findings by a radiologist can lead to a change in treatment strategy.
Introduction: Neuroendocrine tumor has an annual incidence of 2–5 cases/100,000 inhabitants, most of them asymptomatic, and may clinically present as carcinoid syndrome: facial flushing, diarrhea, and bronchospasm. It has a great tendency to metastasize to regional lymph nodes and liver, being unusual in the breast. Clinical case: A black 47-year-old woman without comorbidities presented a nodule with progressive growth for 2 years in the right upper inner quadrant (RUIQ), biopsied and diagnosed as breast cancer, without a specific subtype or immunohistochemistry (IHC). Physical examination revealed a 3 cm nodule, hard and fixed axillary lymph node, and enlarged yet fibroelastic and mobile anterior cervical lymph node. Ultrasound (US) identified two irregular nodules in the RUIQ and the junction of the right outer quadrants (JROQ) measuring 2.5 cm and 0.7 cm, respectively, and level I axillary lymph node with cortical thickening. The JROQ nodule and the axillary lymph node were biopsied. The cervical lymph node did not show loss of hilum or suspicious abnormalities on US and was not biopsied. Anatomopathological results of the nodule were compatible with invasive carcinoma without a specific subtype, with estrogen receptor weakly positive (10%), Ki-67 7%, and negative for other markers. The axillary lymph node was negative for metastasis. During staging, an abdominal computed tomography identified a 1.9 cm lesion of likely neuroendocrine origin in the ileocecal valve with metastasis to the liver, regional lymph nodes, and breast. Complementary IHC of the biopsy slide was later performed with chromogranin, synaptophysin, and CDX-2, and the diagnosis reached was breast metastasis of neuroendocrine tumor. An external review of biopsy slides of the RUIQ nodule was requested, and the patient was referred to the oncology department to continue treatment. Conclusion: Metastasis of gastrointestinal tumors to the breast corresponds to less than 0.5% of cancers, with 15 reports in the literature, of which only 7 were asymptomatic, and their clinical presentation started with breast lesion, as in the case described herein. Given its rarity, as well as the clinical and radiological difficulties in differentiating these lesions, special attention must be paid to differential diagnoses, especially in cases of discrepancies between the tumor histology and IHC or lack of correlation between image and clinical condition.
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