Author/Authors :
Esmaeili Mostafa نويسنده Pharmacologist, Vice-chancellery for Food and Drug, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran , Hosseini Azam نويسنده Tehran, IR Iran
Abstract :
Introduction Primary malignant melanoma of the oral cavity is a
rare occurrence. This tumor, compared to other malignant tumors of the
oral cavity, has higher tendency to metastasize or locally invade the
adjacent structures. Its most common site of occurrence in the oral
cavity is the palate followed by the maxillary gingiva. Oral melanoma
does not have a pathognomonic clinical manifestation and in rare cases,
it may not even cause clinical discoloration of the mucosa either; in
this case, it is referred to as amelanotic melanoma. Most cases of
amelanotic melanomas are metastatic rather than primary tumors. The
Survival rate of patients with mucosal melanoma is lower than that of
patients with cutaneous melanoma. Prognosis is much poorer for
amelanotic melanoma due to difficult and delayed diagnosis compared to
cutaneous melanoma. Case Presentation In this study, a 33-year-old white
male presented to the oral medicine department of Shahed University,
school of dentistry, complaining of an extensive pink-redexophytic mass
on the attached gingiva of the maxillary right central incisor extending
posteriorly to the maxillary right first molar. He had it for the past
five months. The patient had no systemic disease and the panoramic
radiograph of the patient showed no pathological lesion.