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Nodular Fasciitis Of The Oral Cavity With Partial Spontaneous Regression (nodular Fasciitis)

de Carli et al., 2012Sarcoma

de Carli, M. L., Sa Fernandes, K., Dos Santos Pinto, D.,Jr, Witzel, A. L., & Martins, M. T. (2012). Nodular fasciitis of the oral cavity with partial spontaneous regression (nodular fasciitis). Head and Neck Pathology, doi:10.1007/s12105-012-0390-3

Abstract

Nodular fasciitis is a lesion found in the subcutaneous fascia that micoscopically presents as a benign proliferation of fibroblasts and myofibroblasts, which may be mistaken for a sarcoma due to clinically rapid growth. Diagnosis is by histopathology and of the immunohistochemical profile. We describe a case of nodular fasciitis in the oral cavity that demonstrated partial spontaneous regression. The patient was a 32-year-old man with a buccal mucosal mass, which had grown rapidly for 45 days. On microscopic examination, the lesion displayed a well-delineated but not encapsulated proliferation of spindle cells, with a nodular growth pattern. Immunohistochemical analysis showed positivity of the spindle cells for the antibodies against smooth muscle actin and muscle-specific actin (HHF-35). Treatment of such lesions typically involves complete conservative excision, but the lesion may regress eventually in the absence of definitive treatment.

Case Details

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Treatment & Mechanisms

No treatment or mechanism details have been reported for this case.