Author/Authors :
Tamgadge, Avinash Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology and Microbiolog - D Y Patil University School of Dentistry - Sector 7, Nerul, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, India , Tamgadge, Sandhya Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology and Microbiolog - D Y Patil University School of Dentistry - Sector 7, Nerul, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, India , Gotmare, Swati Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology and Microbiolog - D Y Patil University School of Dentistry - Sector 7, Nerul, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, India , Kesarkar, Kashmira Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology and Microbiolog - D Y Patil University School of Dentistry - Sector 7, Nerul, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Abstract :
Juvenile ossifying fibroma (JOF) is a rare, benign, locally
aggressive entity of the extragnathic craniofacial bones
with a high tendency towards recurrence. Two distinctive
microscopic patterns of juvenile ossifying fibroma have been
described: a trabecular juvenile ossifying fibroma (TrJOF)
and a psammomatoid juvenile ossifying fibroma (PJOF).
Psammomatoid variant is predominantly a craniofacial lesion and
occurs rarely in the jaws. The pathognomonic histopathologic
feature is the presence of spherical ossicles, which are similar to
psammoma bodies. Aneurysmal bone cyst exists as a secondary
lesion arising from another osseous condition such as fibrous
dysplasia, ossifying fibroma and giant cell granuloma. Very
few cases of juvenile psammomatoid ossifying fibroma in
association with the secondary aneurysmal bone cyst formation
have been reported in the literature. Treatment consists of
complete surgical removal; the incomplete excision has been
associated with a high local recurrence rate. The authors report a
case of recurrence of psammomatoid juvenile ossifying fibroma
with aneurysmal bone cyst in an 8-year-old boy emphasizing the
point that concomitant occurrence of these locally aggressive
lesions requires adequate surgical removal and long-term
follow-up.