Tumors of the Oro-Facial System

The increasing number of malignant cases in the oro-facial area represents by their increasing number lately a new problem regarding the treatment and diagnosis. This cases present an increased difficulty of diagnostic and treatment, because they are usually diagnosticated in lately stages. Patients are often unaware of the gravity of their situation due to the lack of specific or almost absent symptomatology.
The incriminated factors and co-factors incriminated in the development of the malignant manifestations are of multiple origins: use of tobacco products, especially associated to alcohol abuse, chronical topic irritation of the oral mucosa, genetic predisposition or some types of viruses (human papilloma virus type 16 and 18 and herpes virus). Also factors like: environmental modifications, age, alimentation or pharmaceutical drug usage can be incriminated for the increasing pathology of the last decades, especially in well developed countries both from Europe and North America.
Our presentation is based on the case of a 61 years old male, showing almost the typical premises of a malignant pathology starting from the evolution of the oral lesion and the general and dental pathology status with the correlation of the objective and subjective examination.
The lesion usually benefits of surgical treatment, followed by radiotherapy and oro-facial reconstruction, that can imply both plastic surgery and prosthetic rehabilitation, as was the case of our patient. Of most importance remains the moment of the prosthetic treatment and its correlation with radiotherapy, regarding the tissue modification that irradiation has on this level.

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