1. Dental Management of Congenital Granular Cell Lesion and Neonatal Teeth: A Case Report
- Author
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Jaegon Kim, Yeon-Mi Yang, Minkyung Tak, and Daewoo Lee
- Subjects
Dental anomalies ,Curette ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Dentistry ,General Medicine ,Neonatal teeth ,Curettage ,Odontogenic ,Tooth Eruption ,Lesion ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Granular cell ,stomatognathic system ,Natal Teeth ,medicine ,Humans ,Odontogenesis ,medicine.symptom ,Dental papilla ,business ,Dental Care - Abstract
Congenital granular cell lesion (CGCL) is a rare benign oral cavity tumor in infants. Neonatal teeth are also rare dental anomalies that appear during the first month of life. This report describes a case of eruption of neonatal teeth after surgical excision of CGCL. Surprisingly, residual neonatal teeth erupted after extraction of the neonatal teeth. If neonatal teeth are mobile, they should be carefully extracted with curettage of the underlying tissues of the dental papilla; failure to curette the socket might result in eruption of odontogenic remnants. If neonatal teeth were exfoliated, parents should be informed of the need for regular checkups with a dentist due to possibility of development of residual neonatal teeth.
- Published
- 2021