KOREASCHOLAR

A case of Caliber Persistent Artery in Retromolar Buccal Mucosa Exhibiting Slow Growing Potential 느린 성장력을 보이는 구치후방 협점막에 생긴 지속성 두께의 동맥혈

Sang Shin Lee, Sang Hun Choi, Woo Hyuk Cho, Yeon Sook Kim, Suk Keun Lee
  • 언어ENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/305337
대한구강악안면병리학회지
제39권 제3호 (2015.06)
pp.559-566
대한구강악안면병리학회 (Korean Academy Of Oral And Maxillofacial Pathology)
초록

Caliber persistent artery (CPA) is a vascular anomaly presenting as a bluish and pulsatile artery in the subepithelial tissue. Although the incidence of CPA was debated, many CPAs occurred in the perioral and facial tissues at which the embryonal strapedial artery networks were distributed. The present study demonstrated a case of CPA occurred in the retromolar buccal mucosa in a 37 years old male. The lesion showed many pinkish granular spots, but was asymptomatic except biting irritation during mastication. It had slowly increased in size up to 20 × 25 mm for 3 years, and recently became hemorrhagic due to the biting injury between left upper and lower second molars. With the fear of oral cancer an incisional biopsy was performed, and followed by histological and immunohistochemical study. Histologically the lesion showed many tortuous artery localized at the submucosa area, and the arterial wall was thick and its lumen was narrowed and shrunken. In the immunochemistry α-SMA was positive for thick smooth muscle layer of artery and arterioles, TGase 2 was weakly positive for the luminal surface of arterial intima, and bFGF was consistently positive for the perivascular fibrous tissue. But PCNA, VEGF, CD31, CMG2, TGF-β1, HSP-70, and 14-3-3 were almost negative for the vascular tissue. Therefore, it was presumed that the lesion was not actively proliferative nor degenerative but still retained its cellular stability and slow growing potential. It was finally diagnosed as CPA differentially from arterio-venous malformation, hemangioma, lymphangioma, and squamous cell carcinoma. The retromolar buccal mucosa CPA is first reported in this study and may present usual clinical findings depending on its size and location. This asymptomatic lesion could be severely hemorrhagic by minor biting injury, therefore, precise differential diagnosis should be made through biopsy, and careful therapy be followed.

저자
  • Sang Shin Lee(Department of Oral Pathology, College of Dentistry, Gangneung-Wonju National University) | 이상신
  • Sang Hun Choi(Young-Dong Dental Clinic) | 최상훈
  • Woo Hyuk Cho(Young-Dong Dental Clinic) | 최우혁
  • Yeon Sook Kim(Department of Dental Hygiene, College of Health Sciences, Cheongju University) | 김연숙
  • Suk Keun Lee(Department of Oral Pathology, College of Dentistry, Gangneung-Wonju National University) | 이석근 Correspondence