Metastasis of Lung Adenocarcinoma to the Gingiva: A Rare Case Report

Authors

  • A. Prakash Department of Oral Pathology, G. Pulla Reddy Dental College and Hospital, Andhra Pradesh, India
  • J.K. Bai Department of Oral Pathology, G. Pulla Reddy Dental College and Hospital, Andhra Pradesh, India
  • M. Babu Onsurgeon, Viswa Bharathi Cancer Hospital, R.T. NAGAR, Penchikalapadu, Kurnool, India
  • M. Kanth Department of Oral Pathology, G. Pulla Reddy Dental College and Hospital, Andhra Pradesh, India
  • Y. Reddy Department of Oral Surgery, G. Pulla Reddy Dental College and Hospital, Andhra Pradesh, India
Abstract:

Metastatic tumors account for 1% of all oral malignancies. Metastasis to jaw bones is common, particularly in the mandible, rare in the oral soft tissues, and account for only 0.1% of oral malignancies. The majority of metastatic cases (70%) reported in the literature have primary tumors located in the lung, breast, kidney, and colon. Metastasis is a biological complex process that involves detachment from the surrounding cells, regulation of cell motility, invasion, survival, proliferation, and evasion of the immune system. Clinical presentation of metastatic tumors is variable, which may create diagnostic dilemma or may lead to erroneous diagnosis. Metastatic tumors clinically mimic as dental infections. Metastasis to the oral soft tissue from lung cancer, especially gingiva is a rare condition. Metastasis to the gingiva can affect the oral function, speech, and nutrition. Most of the cases in the literature reported that lesion presented in oral soft tissues before the diagnosis of primary tumors. Here we report a case of 62-year-old male patient with metastasis from lung to the gingiva, where the metastasis was detected before primary tumor.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

metastasis of lung adenocarcinoma to the gingiva: a rare case report

metastatic tumors account for 1% of all oral malignancies. metastasis to jaw bones is common, particularly in the mandible, rare in the oral soft tissues, and account for only 0.1% of oral malignancies. the majority of metastatic cases (70%) reported in the literature have primary tumors located in the lung, breast, kidney, and colon. metastasis is a biological complex process that involves det...

full text

Orbital Metastasis from Rectal Adenocarcinoma- Report of a Rare Case

Colorectal carcinoma is a common malignancy in India as well as in world. Inspite of its high metastasizing ability to various organs and lymph node, orbital metastasis is exceptional. Very few cases have been reported in the world literature. We report orbital metastasis in a case of moderately differentiated rectal adenocarcinoma in a 58-year male patient from India in 2015. We want to focus ...

full text

Schwannoma of Gingiva: a rare case report

Schwannoma is a rare benign neural neoplasm derived from Schwann cells of the peripheral nerve sheath. Schwannoma accounts for 25% to 48% of all neoplasm cases in the head and neck region. Oral Schwannoma is an uncommon soft tissue tumor comprising of 1% of all Schwannomas. Tongue is the most common location for oral schwannoma. Occurrence of gingival schwannoma is very rare and less than 10 ca...

full text

Metastasis of Colon Adenocarcinoma to Maxillary Gingiva and Palate

Introduction: Colon adenocarcinoma is one of the foremost causes of cancer mortality. Oral metastasis of colon adenocarcinoma is, however, rare and indicates an end-stage disease process.   Case Report: We report a case of a 69-year-old female with a gingival mass diagnosed with colon adenocarcinoma and liver metastasis after one year. A swelli...

full text

Case Report Of Lymphangitic Carcinomatosis Secondary To Lung Adenocarcinoma

Pulmonary lymphangitic carcinomatosis is the spread of a tumor to the lungs through the lymphatic system, which is a rare and final manifestation of cancer with a poor prognosis. Its main symptom is gradual and progressive dyspnea. The method of choice for diagnosis is high-resolution CT (HRCT), the most common finding of which is an increase in nodular and irregular septal thickness between th...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 40  issue 3

pages  287- 291

publication date 2015-05-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Keywords

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023