Direitos para esta edição cedidos à Atena Editora pelos autores. Open access publication by Atena Editora Todo o conteúdo deste livro está licenciado sob uma Licença de Atribuição Creative Commons. Atribuição-Não-Comercial-NãoDerivativos 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). O conteúdo dos artigos e seus dados em sua forma, correção e confiabilidade são de responsabilidade exclusiva dos autores, inclusive não representam necessariamente a posição oficial da Atena Editora. Permitido o download da obra e o compartilhamento desde que sejam atribuídos créditos aos autores, mas sem a possibilidade de alterá-la de nenhuma forma ou utilizá-la para fins comerciais.Todos os manuscritos foram previamente submetidos à avaliação cega pelos pares, membros do Conselho Editorial desta Editora, tendo sido aprovados para a publicação com base em critérios de neutralidade e imparcialidade acadêmica.A Atena Editora é comprometida em garantir a integridade editorial em todas as etapas do processo de publicação, evitando plágio, dados ou resultados fraudulentos e impedindo que interesses financeiros comprometam os padrões éticos da publicação. Situações suspeitas de má conduta científica serão investigadas sob o mais alto padrão de rigor acadêmico e ético.
Introduction: Osteoradionecrosis (ORN) of the jaws is a late, severe and difficult to manage side effect in patients who underwent radiotherapy (RT) in the head and neck region. Treatment remains controversial, especially in refractory cases that do not respond to multiple attempts with different therapies, due to their complex pathophysiology. It is based on conservative non-surgical approaches, even in large resections using free flaps. The present study aims to present and describe a clinical case of refractory ORN treated through microsurgical reconstruction and adjuvant therapies. Case Report: A 51-year-old female patient with oncological background of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) of the floor of the mouth, previously treated with marginal mandibulectomy, and who subsequently relapsed. In a second surgical time, left hemimandibulectomy was performed, followed by microsurgical reconstruction with the fibular osteomusculocutaneous free flap, besides, dental implants were placed in the perioperative time. Radiotherapy was performed using a 3D conformal technique technique with a total dose of 66 Gy and after six months the patient developed infection in the treated region and it was observed partial exposure of the fibular flap and intra and extraoral purulent drainage, and after imaging analysis the diagnosis of ORN was established. Some non-surgical therapeutic attempts were performed without clinical response and a new surgical approach was performed based on sequestrectomy, the removal of the titanium plaque and dental implants with a second microsurgical reconstruction with forearm fasciocutaneous free flap to cover the soft tissue defect was done. Conclusion: The pathophysiology of ORN remains controversial and the predictive factors for its appearance, development, and progression are still unclear. Marginal mandibulectomy could be associated with a rapid onset of ORN in patients submitted to adjuvant RT and it could be considered as a potential predictive factor. Combined therapies are reliable alternatives for local control in refractory cases and in advanced stages, and surgical removal with microsurgical reconstruction procedures are still a feasible alternative that has shown satisfactory clinical results.
Summary: Radiation-induced head and neck sarcoma (RIHNS) is a rare and serious long-term complication of radiotherapy (RT), with poor prognosis and high morbidity and mortality. Diagnosis is based on immunohistochemistry and molecular biomarker analysis, and therapy is usually surgical. Other adjuvant therapies might be considered. This case report aimed to describe the clinical, imaging, histopathological, and therapeutic characteristics of a rare case of RIHNS in the mandible after 21 years of RT. A 68-year-old male patient underwent a partial left parotidectomy in 1995, was diagnosed with pleomorphic adenoma, and after recurrence of the lesion in 2000, underwent an ipsilateral total parotidectomy with adjuvant RT. In May 2021, he complained of an ulcerated nodular lesion on the tongue that extended toward the lower gingiva, associated with oral bleeding and difficulties with swallowing. After biopsy in the gingival margin and histopathological analysis, the diagnosis of high-grade spindle-cell sarcoma was established. Complete surgical resection with microsurgical reconstruction using a fibular osteomusculocutaneous free flap was performed. RIHNS could appear after a period of almost 20 years after RT. Surgical resection with reconstructive surgery was a reliable and feasible therapeutic option that showed favorable clinical results after an appropriate follow-up.
Introduction: Osteoradionecrosis (ORN) of the jaws is a late, severe and difficult to manage side effect in patients who underwent radiotherapy (RT) in the head and neck region. Treatment remains controversial, especially in refractory cases that do not respond to multiple attempts with different therapies, due to their complex pathophysiology. It is based on conservative non-surgical approaches, even in large resections using free flaps. The present study aims to present and describe a clinical case of refractory ORN treated through microsurgical reconstruction and adjuvant therapies. Case Report: A 51-year-old female patient with oncological background of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) of the floor of the mouth, previously treated with marginal mandibulectomy, and who subsequently relapsed. In a second surgical time, left hemimandibulectomy was performed, followed by microsurgical reconstruction with the fibular osteomusculocutaneous free flap, besides, dental implants were placed in the perioperative time. Radiotherapy was performed using a 3D conformal technique technique with a total dose of 66 Gy and after six months the patient developed infection in the treated region and it was observed partial exposure of the fibular flap and intra and extraoral purulent drainage, and after imaging analysis the diagnosis of ORN was established. Some non-surgical therapeutic attempts were performed without clinical response and a new surgical approach was performed based on sequestrectomy, the removal of the titanium plaque and dental implants with a second microsurgical reconstruction with forearm fasciocutaneous free flap to cover the soft tissue defect was done. Conclusion: The pathophysiology of ORN remains controversial and the predictive factors for its appearance, development, and progression are still unclear. Marginal mandibulectomy could be associated with a rapid onset of ORN in patients submitted to adjuvant RT and it could be considered as a potential predictive factor. Combined therapies are reliable alternatives for local control in refractory cases and in advanced stages, and surgical removal with microsurgical reconstruction procedures are still a feasible alternative that has shown satisfactory clinical results.
Direitos para esta edição cedidos à Atena Editora pelos autores. Open access publication by Atena Editora Todo o conteúdo deste livro está licenciado sob uma Licença de Atribuição Creative Commons. Atribuição-Não-Comercial-NãoDerivativos 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). O conteúdo dos artigos e seus dados em sua forma, correção e confiabilidade são de responsabilidade exclusiva dos autores, inclusive não representam necessariamente a posição oficial da Atena Editora. Permitido o download da obra e o compartilhamento desde que sejam atribuídos créditos aos autores, mas sem a possibilidade de alterá-la de nenhuma forma ou utilizá-la para fins comerciais.Todos os manuscritos foram previamente submetidos à avaliação cega pelos pares, membros do Conselho Editorial desta Editora, tendo sido aprovados para a publicação com base em critérios de neutralidade e imparcialidade acadêmica.A Atena Editora é comprometida em garantir a integridade editorial em todas as etapas do processo de publicação, evitando plágio, dados ou resultados fraudulentos e impedindo que interesses financeiros comprometam os padrões éticos da publicação. Situações suspeitas de má conduta científica serão investigadas sob o mais alto padrão de rigor acadêmico e ético.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.