Contemporary Clinical Dentistry (Jan 2013)

Juvenile psammomatoid ossifying fibroma: An unusual case report

  • Nidhi Yadav,
  • Prashant Gupta,
  • Shantala R Naik,
  • Ashish Aggarwal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0976-237X.123094
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. 566 – 568

Abstract

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Ossifying fibromas are well-demarcated benign fibro-osseous tumors of craniofacial skeleton most often in the jaws. It has two types, conventional and juvenile ossifying fibroma (JOF). JOF is considered a separate entity from ossifying fibroma due to its locally aggressive behavior and tendency to occur at a young age. Two subtypes of JOF, i.e., juvenile psammomatoid ossifying fibroma (JPOF) and juvenile trabecular ossifying fibroma have been identified on the basis of histology 70% of the JPOF occur in the paranasal sinuses, 20% in the maxilla and only 10% in the mandible. Here, we report a case of JPOF in a 14-year-old girl causing an asymptomatic expansile swelling in the right mandibular posterior region, which is a rare site for this tumor.

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