This case report describes an ameloblastic fibro-odontoma arising from a calcifying odontogenic cyst (COC) in the mandible of a twenty-three-year old male. The patient was referred to the Department of Oral Surgery, Tokyo Dental College, on March 30th, 2000, complaining of a painful swelling, which had appeared three weeks earlier on his left mandibular molar region. In a pathological view, the lesion was a round cyst the size of a chicken-egg, dark red in color, and surrounded by a thick membrane. The cyst had an epithelium of varying thickness which included many ghost cells and an enamel-like structure on the inside, and a thick wall of connective tissue with an ameloblastic fibro-odontoma on the outside. Enamel organ-like epithelial islands were structured radially in the form of strands with immature dentin. Cytokeratin 19 was strongly immunoreactive in the epithelium of the lesion; osteopontin and osteocalcin reacted in the mesenchymal cells and weakly in the epithelial element of this tumor.
CITATION STYLE
Matsuzaka, K., Inoue, T., Nashimoto, M., Takemoto, K., Ishikawa, H., Asaka, M., … Noma, H. (2001). A case of an ameloblastic fibro-odontoma arising from a calcifying odontogenic cyst. The Bulletin of Tokyo Dental College, 42(1), 51–55. https://doi.org/10.2209/tdcpublication.42.51
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