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Calcifying epithelial odontogenic (Pindborg) tumor. A clinical case.
Minerva stomatologica, 2004Calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor (CEOT), Pindborg tumor, is a rare benign odontogenic neoplasm representing about 0.4-3% of all odontogenic tumors. This tumor more frequently affects adults in an age range of 20-60 years, with a peak of incidence between 40 and 60 years. About 190 cases of CEOT have been reported in the dental literature.
CICCONETTI, Andrea +4 more
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[So-called Pindborg's tumor: calcifying odontogenic epithelial tumor].
Minerva stomatologica, 1978A case of Pindborg's tumour or calcifying odontogenous epithelial tumour in the included +3 of a young girl is presented. The histogenetic explanation given by the first workers to the earliest cases--origin in residues of the enamel organic matrix--is accepted as the most probable, though it is pointed out that the small number of reported cases make ...
M, D'Angelo, V, Di Pisa
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[Pindborg's tumor: a propos of a case].
Revue belge de medecine dentaire, 2011The calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor was first described as an entity by Danish pathologist Jens Pindborg in 1955. It is an uncommon and locally invasive benign odontogenic tumor. The most characteristic findings are the presence of amyloid-like substance and calcified concentric liesegang rings.
Jalal, Hamama +6 more
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[Calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor of the maxilla (Pindborg tumor)].
Mund-, Kiefer- und Gesichtschirurgie : MKG, 2005A male patient presented with an extraordinarily large calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor (CEOT or Pindborg-tumor) that affected the maxilla. The disease became evident due to alterations in the facial aspect, in particular of the perioral region, caused by the expanding tumor.
L, Li, K T, Jäkel, R E, Friedrich
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Calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor (Pindborg tumor)
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1971Edward R. Mopsik, Samir A. Gabriel
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[Case study: a calcified epithelial odontogenic tumor (Pindborg tumor)].
Acta stomatologica Belgica, 1993The calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor is a benign but locally aggressive tumor. Occasionally the term Pindborg tumor is used after the Danish pathologist who first described this tumor as an entity. The clinical feature is most commonly a slow-growing painless swelling. The tumor may show considerable roentgenographic variation.
D, Withofs +4 more
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Calcifying epithelial odontogenic tumor (“Pindborg tumor”)
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1975openaire +1 more source

