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Minimally Invasive Surgery in a Pediatric Palatal Plasmacytoid Myoepithelioma
Author(s) -
Ok Hyung Nam,
Baeksoo Lee,
Sooeon Lee,
Kwangchul Kim,
Sungchul Choi
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the journal of the korean academy of pedtatric dentistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2288-3819
pISSN - 1226-8496
DOI - 10.5933/jkapd.2016.43.1.79
Subject(s) - myoepithelioma , medicine , pathology , immunohistochemistry , myoepithelial cell
Myoepithelioma is a rare disease in the salivary gland. Myoepithelioma is more common in adults than in children or adolescents. An 8-years-old female patient visited our clinic with a chief complaint of a painless swelling on the palate. Conservative treatment that preserves the overlaying palatal mucosa while surgically excising the tumor was carried out under general anesthesia, because the patient was young and the size of the tumor was relatively large. The surgical wound healed well and there had not been any sign of recurrence during the regular follow-up period of 40 months. Minimally invasive surgical treatment which preserves peripheral palatal tissue can be useful in a pediatric myoepithelioma.

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