Fibro-epithelial polyps in children: A report of two cases with a literature review

A fibro-epithelial polyp is the most common epithelial benign tumor of the oral cavity. Such a polyp is of mesodermal origin and it is a pink, red, or white knob-like painless growth that is sessile or pedunculated. A fibro-epithelial polyp commonly occurs on buccal mucosa, the tongue, or the gingiv...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Intractable & Rare Diseases Research Vol. 5; no. 2; pp. 129 - 132
Main Authors: Mishra, Apurva, Pandey, Ramesh Kumar
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Japan International Research and Cooperation Association for Bio & Socio-Sciences Advancement 01-05-2016
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Summary:A fibro-epithelial polyp is the most common epithelial benign tumor of the oral cavity. Such a polyp is of mesodermal origin and it is a pink, red, or white knob-like painless growth that is sessile or pedunculated. A fibro-epithelial polyp commonly occurs on buccal mucosa, the tongue, or the gingiva. A fibro-epithelial polyp is an inflammatory hyperplastic lesion in response to chronic irritation due to calculus, sharp tooth edges, irregular denture borders, or overhanging restorations. Such a polyp rarely occurs before the fourth decade of life and its prevalence is not sex-specific. The current paper presents two cases where an intraoral fibro-epithelial polyp was successfully managed in children. Conservative surgical excision was performed in both cases. A follow-up at 3 months revealed uneventful healing of the site without reoccurrence of the lesion.
ISSN:2186-3644
2186-361X
DOI:10.5582/irdr.2016.01015