Archives of Plastic Surgery (Sep 2021)

Surgical management of palatal teratoma (epignathus) with the use of virtual reconstruction and 3D models: a case report and literature review

  • Cynthia Minerva Gonzalez-Cantu,
  • Pablo Juan Moreno-Peña,
  • Mayela Guadalupe Salazar-Lara,
  • Pablo Patricio Flores García,
  • Fernando Félix Montes-Tapia,
  • Victor Hugo Cervantes-Kardasch,
  • Yanko Castro-Govea

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5999/aps.2021.00318
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 48, no. 05
pp. 518 – 523

Abstract

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Epignathus is a rare congenital orofacial teratoma that arises from the sphenoid region of the palate or the pharynx. It occurs in approximately 1:35,000 to 1:200,000 live births representing 2% to 9% of all teratomas. We present the case of a newborn of 39.4 weeks of gestation with a tumor that occupied the entire oral cavity. The patient was delivered by cesarean section. Oral resection was managed by pediatric surgery. Plastic surgery used virtual 3-dimensional models to establish the extension, and depth of the tumor. Bloc resection and reconstruction of the epignathus were performed. The mass was diagnosed as a mature teratoma associated with cleft lip and palate, nasoethmoidal meningocele that conditions hypertelorism, and a pseudomacrostoma. Tridimensional technology was applied to plan the surgical intervention. It contributed to a better understanding of the relationships between the tumor and the adjacent structures. This optimized the surgical approach and outcome.

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