HighlightsThe World Health Organization, in the last classification of the Head and Neck tumours defined Odontogenic Keratocyst as a cyst instead of a tumor.There are plenty of approaches in order to reduce the high recurrence of this lesion consisted in surgical, non-surgical and combined treatment.Surgical treatment is considered, for several years as the gold standard treatment, but currently a combined therapy has become as a first choice.
Introduction and importance
Fibrous Dysplasia (FD) is a benign fibro-osseous lesion, characterized by replacement with fibrous connective tissue instead of normal bone. The best treatment option for the condition has not yet been established, although several therapeutic approaches have been reported. The present case report describes the clinical, imaging and therapeutic aspects of an atypical bilateral presentation of FD in the mandible.
Case presentation
A 26-year-old afro-descendent woman, who had previously undergone surgery to remove FD in the right hemimandible, complained of asymptomatic swelling in the left hemimandible. Imaging analysis showed an ipsilateral extensive multilocular mandibular lesion, with thinning of the cortical bone. After diagnosis of FD, complete surgical removal was performed, associated with immediate local reconstruction with xenograft and covering membrane, with primary wound closure.
Clinical discussion
Bilateral presentation of FD is uncommon, and its diagnosis by means of clinical data, imaging and histopathological analysis, is relevant in order to establish the correct therapy.
Conclusion
Complete surgical removal associated with immediate local bone reconstruction, has shown satisfactory clinical results, when adequate follow-up is performed.
Introduction: LLLT is used in various clinical situations for the relief of postoperative inflammatory symptoms in TMD cases. Many treatment protocols use laser radiation, but there is still no evidence as to whether one of them is superior to all the other. The objective was to establish whether there is evidence that LLLT can reduce the main symptoms of TMDs and to determine the most effective application protocol. Methods: a systematic review of the literature was performed in the main databases: PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science, by independent researchers who evaluated studies using different LLLT protocols to treat TMD symptoms, considering specific outcomes such as pain, mouth opening and jaw movements. Results: thirteen studies fully met the eligibility criteria. The most used laser type was GaAlAg, with a wavelength of 830 nm, number of applications ranging from 8 to 10, and 4 weeks of follow-up. Conclusions: LLLT may be considered as an alternative for the relief of TMD symptoms; however, scientific evidence of one of the protocols being superior to the others could not be found.
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.