Ameloblastomatous CCOT: A Case Report of a Rare Variant of CCOT with a Review of the Literature on Its Diverse Histopathologic Presentation [PDF]
Calcifying odontogenic cyst is considered as a rare lesion and accounts for 1% of jaw cysts. It represents a heterogeneous group of lesions which exhibit a variety of clinicopathologic and behavioral features. It has been categorized as cyst and neoplasm.
Shailesh Menat +3 more
doaj +9 more sources
Ameloblastomatous Calcifying Cystic Odontogenic Tumour: A Rare Variant [PDF]
Calcifying Cystic Odontogenic Tumor (CCOT) was previously described by Gorlin et al., in 1962 as Calcifying odontogenic cyst. CCOT is a rare lesion which accounts for 2% of all odontogenic pathological changes in the jaws.
Rama Raju Devaraju +4 more
doaj +2 more sources
Immunoexpression of Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway proteins in ameloblastoma and calcifying cystic odontogenic tumor. [PDF]
Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway is essential for the beginning of odontogenesis and may be involved in the development and progression of some odontogenic tumors.
Dutra SN +3 more
europepmc +2 more sources
Calcifying cystic odontogenic tumor associated with ameloblastoma – A rare histological variant
Calcifying odontogenic cysts (COCs) represent a heterogeneous group of lesions that exhibits a variety of clinical, behavioral, and histological features. COC or Gorlin's cyst is now classified by the World Health Organization as a tumor.
Keerthi Muddana +3 more
doaj +2 more sources
Ameloblastomatous calcifying odontogenic cyst: A rare histologic variant
Ameloblastoma is a well-known odontogenic tumor that can be associated with calcifying odontogenic cysts (COCs), but only a few reports give its clinical and radiographic features. Calcifying odontogenic cyst was first categorized as a distinct entity by
Basavaraj N Kallalli +3 more
doaj +3 more sources
Calcifying cystic odontogenic tumor (CCOT) is an extremely rare clinical entity. It was considered as a cyst until 2005, when World Health Organization included it among the odontogenic tumors. It presents as a slow-growing, painless swelling of the jaw.
Kamala Rawson +3 more
doaj +3 more sources
Notch signaling and ghost cell fate in the calcifying cystic odontogenic tumor. [PDF]
Notch signaling is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism that enables adjacent cells to adopt different fates. Ghost cells (GCs) are anucleate cells with homogeneous pale eosinophilic cytoplasm and very pale to clear central areas (previous nucleus sites)
Siar CH +8 more
europepmc +6 more sources
Unilocular radiolucency of mandibular angle region –A clinicopathological conference
Calcifying Cystic Odontogenic Tumor (CCOT) constitutes 1% of all jaw cysts and considered as one of the rarest odontogenic lesions. It's a group of odontogenic entities which exhibits variety of clinical and biological behaviors.
Anil Mangutti +3 more
doaj +5 more sources
Dentinogenic ghost cell tumour: A case report [PDF]
A 23-year-old Malay female patient presented with a history of pain and swelling over right maxilla. Imaging showed a well-defined unilocular radiolucency with areas of radiopacity in the right maxilla.
Kwong , Adelaide Ji Fung +1 more
core +2 more sources
Importance of cone beam computed tomography for diagnosis of calcifying cystic odontogenic tumour associated to odontoma : report of a case [PDF]
The calcifying cystic odontogenic tumour (CCOT) is a rare benign cystic neoplasm not infrequently associated with odontoma. This report documents a case of CCOT associated with compound odontoma arising in the anterior maxilla in a 25-year-old woman ...
Botelho, Tessa-de Lucena +5 more
core +2 more sources

