Dysplastic Proliferation of Odontogenic Epithelium on the Xenograft Bones Inserted for Dental Implant
(주)코리아스칼라
- 최초 등록일
- 2016.04.02
- 최종 저작일
- 2015.02
- 8페이지/ 어도비 PDF
- 가격 4,000원
* 본 문서는 배포용으로 복사 및 편집이 불가합니다.
서지정보
ㆍ발행기관 : 대한구강악안면병리학회
ㆍ수록지정보 : 대한구강악안면병리학회지 / 39권 / 1호
ㆍ저자명 : Sang Shin Lee, Yeon Sook Kim, Suk Keun Lee
목차
Ⅰ. INTRODUCTION
Ⅱ. CASE REPORT
IV. DISCUSSION
V. REFERENCES
영어 초록
A 57 years old female received xenogenic bone graft for the extraction socket augmentation of right maxillary molars and for the sinus floor elevation six months ago. The bone graft sites were healed uneventfully and showed marked radiopacity in the postoperative X-ray view. Before dental implant insertion the bone biopsy was made using trephine bur and examined pathologically. The graft bones showed minimum new bone deposition with dysplastic epithelium. The epithelium was proliferative on the surface of graft bones forming epithelial strands and nests, similar to the odontogenic epithelium. The immunohistochemical study was performed using different antisera of odontogenic markers, growth factors, oncogenes, etc. The epithelial cells were strongly positive for pan-keratins, EGF, pAKT, and HSP-70, consistently positive for PCNA, p53, EGFR, 14-3-3, and survivin, slightly positive for ameloblastin, but rarely positive for amelogenin. Particularly the matrix of graft bone was slightly positive for EGF. Taken together, it is presumed that the abnormal epithelium on the graft bones was derived from odontogenic epithelial elements, Malassez epithelial rests, distributed at the periodontal tissue of maxillary molars, and that they might undergo dysplastic proliferation affected by the release of growth factors and osteogenic proteins from the graft bones. It is also suggested that the graft bone substitutes inserted for the dental implant possibly have a potential to induce the proliferation of odontogenic epithelial rests leading to the pathogenesis of odontogenic cysts and tumors.
참고 자료
없음
"대한구강악안면병리학회지"의 다른 논문
더보기 (1/6)