Clinical, Radiographic and Biochemical Findings of a Case of Florid Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia: A Disorder of its own Type in Bone Disorders  

Abhishek Singh Nayyar1 , S. Deshmukh2 , B. Kartheeki1 , A. Ravikiran3 , Y. Samatha3 , B. Dasari3
1. Department of Oral Medicine and Radiology, Saraswati Dhanwantari Dental College and Hospital and Post-Graduate Research Institute, Maharashtra, India
2. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Saraswati Dhanwantari Dental College and Hospital and Post-Graduate Research Institute, Maharashtra, India
3. Department of Oral Medicine and Radiology, Sibar Institute of Dental Sciences, Andhra Pradesh, India
Author    Correspondence author
International Journal of Clinical Case Reports, 2016, Vol. 6, No. 29   doi: 10.5376/ijccr.2016.06.0029
Received: 10 Aug., 2016    Accepted: 18 Nov., 2016    Published: 25 Nov., 2016
© 2016 BioPublisher Publishing Platform
This is an open access article published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Preferred citation for this article:

Nayyar A.S., Deshmukh S., Kartheeki B., Ravikiran A., Samatha Y., and Dasari B., 2016, Clinical, Radiographic and Biochemical Findings of a Case of Florid Cemento-Osseous Dysplasia: A Disorder of its own Type in Bone Disorders, International Journal of Clinical Case Reports, 6(29): 1-5 (doi: 10.5376/ijccr.2016.06.0029)

Abstract

Cemento-osseous dysplasias (CODs) are a group of disorders originating from periodontal tissues. They are classified, depending on their extent and location, into three groups: periapical, florid and focal.

 

Florid cemento-osseous dysplasias (FCODs) are one of the subgroups of cemento-osseous dysplasias (CODs) which were first described by Melrose, Abrams and Mills in 1976 and predominantly affects the jaws in middle-aged black females. They usually manifest as multiple radiopaque cementum-like masses distributed throughout the jaws or, involve few quadrants. Patients do not have specific laboratory or, radiological evidence of bone disease in other parts of the skeleton. The exact etiology of this disorder however is yet to be known.  

 

Asymptomatic patients generally do not require treatment. Patients with this disease exhibit poor healing and osteomyelitis might, also, develop even after minor surgical procedures including extraction of teeth in the affected areas. Surgical intervention is required for cases with gross disfigurement.     

 

Complete resection of the lesion is considered to be impractical because the lesion usually occupies larger portion of the jaws. Herein, we are presenting a case of florid cemento-osseous dysplasia in a 45 year old female patient who reported to the Outpatient Department with some other odontogenic complaint while the lesion was detected when radiographs were taken for the same.

Keywords
Florid; Radiopaque; Asymptomatic
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