Results 151 to 160 of about 5,502 (187)
Evaluating Hearing Impairment in Different Histopathological Grades of Oral Submucous Fibrosis: An Audiometric Analysis. [PDF]
Jha R +5 more
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Oral leukoplakia: still an enigmatic disorder. [PDF]
Aguirre-Urizar JM.
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Assessment of pharyngeal airway space with MRI In oral submucous fibrosis: A cross-sectional observational study. [PDF]
Anandan R +3 more
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Serum Homocysteine and Its Diagnostic Significance in Oral Submucous Fibrosis: A Cross-Sectional Study. [PDF]
Juvvadi S +4 more
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Optimizing Treatment Outcomes for Odontogenic Keratocyst.
Petchiammal SM +5 more
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Journal of Craniofacial Surgery, 2006
Pindborg tumor or calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor is a rare benign neoplasm. The average age at diagnosis is 40 years without a significant prevalence for one sex. The most frequent localization is the mandibular premolar and molar area; less frequently the lesion is found in the maxilla, while other localizations like the maxillary sinus are ...
Ungari, C. +4 more
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Pindborg tumor or calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor is a rare benign neoplasm. The average age at diagnosis is 40 years without a significant prevalence for one sex. The most frequent localization is the mandibular premolar and molar area; less frequently the lesion is found in the maxilla, while other localizations like the maxillary sinus are ...
Ungari, C. +4 more
openaire +4 more sources
Pindborg Tumor of the Mandible
Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, 1982Calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor, or Pindborg tumor, is the rarest of odontogenic tumors of the mandible. The tumor is distinct from ameloblastoma histologically, as well as by its less aggressive clinical behavior. Treatment must consist of complete excision—to include a rim of bone surrounding the lesion—to prevent recurrence.
B, Leipzig, P C, Yau
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Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology, 1981
Clinical and histopathologic features of the Pindborg tumor are described. The diagnosis is based on the histological examination revealing areas of polyhedral neoplastic cells, amyloid, and calcified deposits. Since calcifications were missing in the present case, it is considered to be a variant of the Pindborg tumor.
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Clinical and histopathologic features of the Pindborg tumor are described. The diagnosis is based on the histological examination revealing areas of polyhedral neoplastic cells, amyloid, and calcified deposits. Since calcifications were missing in the present case, it is considered to be a variant of the Pindborg tumor.
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Non‐calcifying Pindborg tumor with Langerhans cells
Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine, 1993A rare case of calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor (CEOT) devoid of calcification is reported with histochemical, immunohistochemical and electron microscopic studies. The tumor occurred intraosseously in the left maxillary canine and premolar region of a 58‐year‐old man. The tumor chiefly consisted of scattered small islands of epithelial cells in
T, Takata +5 more
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