2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10006-012-0347-4
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Cementoblastoma: A case report in deciduous tooth

Abstract: This report discusses relevant aspects concerning clinical, radiographic, and histopathological characteristics and treatments.

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Cited by 12 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Most of the time the cause for non-eruption of primary tooth is the presence of a mechanical obstacle, not anatomical, in its trajectory. It is fairly described in literature the association of lesions suchs as odontogenic tumors, cysts and non-neoplastic proliferative lesions (odontoma, cementoblastoma, adenomatoid odontogenic tumor, radicular cysts) with impacted primary teeth [2,6,[10][11][12][13]. Chronology may be modified by factors already discussed, and primary tooth remains impacted by the presence of permanent tooth that have a premature eruption.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the time the cause for non-eruption of primary tooth is the presence of a mechanical obstacle, not anatomical, in its trajectory. It is fairly described in literature the association of lesions suchs as odontogenic tumors, cysts and non-neoplastic proliferative lesions (odontoma, cementoblastoma, adenomatoid odontogenic tumor, radicular cysts) with impacted primary teeth [2,6,[10][11][12][13]. Chronology may be modified by factors already discussed, and primary tooth remains impacted by the presence of permanent tooth that have a premature eruption.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On rare occasions, an impacted tooth, multiple teeth, or a deciduous tooth may be affected as well1578. To our knowledge, there have been 8 reported cases of cementoblastoma that developed on anterior jaws in the literature910111213141516, with only two of them located in the mandible910.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most cementoblastomas reported in humans were located in the mandible, with a predilection for the mandibular permanent first molar (Brannon et al, 2002;Van der Waal, 2005;Huber and Folk, 2009). Association of this tumor with deciduous teeth has only rarely been observed (Van der Waal, 2005;Lemberg et al, 2007;De Noronha Santos Netto et al, 2012;Monti et al, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the cementoblastoma was originally believed to show no or only little tendency to recur (Kramer et al, 1992), a later study in humans reported a recurrence rate of 37% following surgical removal of the tumor (Brannon et al, 2002). Due to its unlimited growth potential, the expanding tumor can cause root resorption, obliteration of the periodontal ligament space and displacement of adjacent teeth, as well as resorption of the surrounding bone and facial bulging (Brannon et al, 2002;Van der Waal, 2005;Jundt and Reichart, 2008;Monti et al, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%