This document provides information on various types of odontogenic cysts:
1. Odontogenic keratocysts are the second most common jaw cysts, occurring most often in males in their 2nd-3rd decades. They have high recurrence rates and are associated with Gorlin-Goltz syndrome.
2. Gingival cysts of infants are small cysts that occur in newborns along the dental ridges and midpalatal raphe. They usually resolve on their own.
3. Gingival cysts of adults occur more often in the mandibular premolar region in the 5th-6th decades. They present as painless swellings and have thin epithelial
This seminar consists of various cysts seen in the oral cavity alonh with various classifications and added case repots for better understanding and the various treatment protocols followed for treating various cysts.
This seminar consists of various cysts seen in the oral cavity alonh with various classifications and added case repots for better understanding and the various treatment protocols followed for treating various cysts.
Cysts with a lining of stratified squamous epithelium: Epidermoid cyst
Milium
Trichilemmal cyst
Vellus hair cyst
Steatocystoma
Dermoid cyst
Cysts lined with non-stratified squamous epithelium: Hidrocystoma, Eccrine or Apocrine
Cysts without an epithelial lining: Mucocele
Digital mucous cyst
Ganglion
Pulmonary Thromboembolism - etilogy, types, medical- Surgical and nursing man...VarunMahajani
Disruption of blood supply to lung alveoli due to blockage of one or more pulmonary blood vessels is called as Pulmonary thromboembolism. In this presentation we will discuss its causes, types and its management in depth.
Cysts with a lining of stratified squamous epithelium: Epidermoid cyst
Milium
Trichilemmal cyst
Vellus hair cyst
Steatocystoma
Dermoid cyst
Cysts lined with non-stratified squamous epithelium: Hidrocystoma, Eccrine or Apocrine
Cysts without an epithelial lining: Mucocele
Digital mucous cyst
Ganglion
Pulmonary Thromboembolism - etilogy, types, medical- Surgical and nursing man...VarunMahajani
Disruption of blood supply to lung alveoli due to blockage of one or more pulmonary blood vessels is called as Pulmonary thromboembolism. In this presentation we will discuss its causes, types and its management in depth.
These simplified slides by Dr. Sidra Arshad present an overview of the non-respiratory functions of the respiratory tract.
Learning objectives:
1. Enlist the non-respiratory functions of the respiratory tract
2. Briefly explain how these functions are carried out
3. Discuss the significance of dead space
4. Differentiate between minute ventilation and alveolar ventilation
5. Describe the cough and sneeze reflexes
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 39, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 34, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
3. Chapter 17, Human Physiology by Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
4. Non-respiratory functions of the lungs https://academic.oup.com/bjaed/article/13/3/98/278874
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Residents are reminded that the flu vaccine is safe and effective. Common side effects are mild and may include soreness at the injection site, mild fever, or muscle aches. These side effects are generally short-lived and far less severe than the flu itself.
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Ethanol (CH3CH2OH), or beverage alcohol, is a two-carbon alcohol
that is rapidly distributed in the body and brain. Ethanol alters many
neurochemical systems and has rewarding and addictive properties. It
is the oldest recreational drug and likely contributes to more morbidity,
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5th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(DSM-5) integrates alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence into a single
disorder called alcohol use disorder (AUD), with mild, moderate,
and severe subclassifications (American Psychiatric Association, 2013).
In the DSM-5, all types of substance abuse and dependence have been
combined into a single substance use disorder (SUD) on a continuum
from mild to severe. A diagnosis of AUD requires that at least two of
the 11 DSM-5 behaviors be present within a 12-month period (mild
AUD: 2–3 criteria; moderate AUD: 4–5 criteria; severe AUD: 6–11 criteria).
The four main behavioral effects of AUD are impaired control over
drinking, negative social consequences, risky use, and altered physiological
effects (tolerance, withdrawal). This chapter presents an overview
of the prevalence and harmful consequences of AUD in the U.S.,
the systemic nature of the disease, neurocircuitry and stages of AUD,
comorbidities, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, genetic risk factors, and
pharmacotherapies for AUD.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE.pdfAnujkumaranit
Artificial intelligence (AI) refers to the simulation of human intelligence processes by machines, especially computer systems. It encompasses tasks such as learning, reasoning, problem-solving, perception, and language understanding. AI technologies are revolutionizing various fields, from healthcare to finance, by enabling machines to perform tasks that typically require human intelligence.
- Video recording of this lecture in English language: https://youtu.be/lK81BzxMqdo
- Video recording of this lecture in Arabic language: https://youtu.be/Ve4P0COk9OI
- Link to download the book free: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/nephrotube-nephrology-books.html
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Knee anatomy and clinical tests 2024.pdfvimalpl1234
This includes all relevant anatomy and clinical tests compiled from standard textbooks, Campbell,netter etc..It is comprehensive and best suited for orthopaedicians and orthopaedic residents.
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2. Definition
A cyst is a pathological cavity having fluid,
semifluid or gaseous contents & which is not
created by the accumulation of pus. It is
frequently, but not always, lined by
epithelium. (Kramer 1974)
2
4. 4
CYSTS OF THE JAWS
A. EPITHELIAL
1. Developmental
a) Odontogenic
i) Odontogenic Keratocyst (Primordial cyst)
ii) Gingival cyst of infants
iii) Gingival cyst of adults
iv) Eruption cyst
v) Dentigerous (follicular)
vi) Lateral periodontal cyst
vi) Botryoid odontogenic Cyst
vii) Glandular Odontogenic Cyst
viii) Calcifying Odontogenic Cyst
5. 5
b) Non-odontogenic
i) Nasopalatine duct (incisive canal) cyst
ii) Nasolabial (nasoalveolar) cyst
iii) Midpalatal raphe cyst of infants
I v) Median palatine, median maxillary and median
mandibular cysts
v) Globulomaxillary cysts
6. 6
2. Inflammatory
i. Radicular cyst
ii. Residual cyst
iii. Paradental cyst and mandibular infected buccal
cyst
iv. Inflammatory collateral cyst
9. 9
First described by Mikulicz, 1876 “Dermoid cyst”
Hauer, 1926 “Cholesteatoma”
Robinson, 1945 “Primordial cyst”
The terminology has been discarded
Philipsen, 1956 “Odontogenic Keratocyst”
Because of its potential aggressive behavior some
researchers have suggested that OKC is a benign
cystic neoplasm and recently the name
“Keratocystic Odontogenic Tumor” has been
suggested
10. Pathogenesis
Robinson, 1945 derived from enamel organ by
degeneration of stellate reticulum before any
calcified structure has been laid down
Primordial cyst
Evidence against this theory
Frequency of aplasia of teeth is relatively higher than
that of keratocysts
Site distribution of these cysts and supernumerary teeth
is different
10
11. 11
Remnants of dental lamina
Origin from overlying oral epithelium as
basal cell hamartias
12. Clinical features
Frquency
11.2% of all jaw cysts
Age
Bimodal age distribution
2nd and 3rd decade
Second peak in 5th and 6th decade
Sex
Male preponderance
12
13. Site
Mandible most frequent (75%)
Almost half of keratocysts occur at the angle of
mandible
13
14. 14
Clinical presentation
Remarkably free of symptoms until the cyst
have reached a large size
Pain, swelling or discharge
Pathologic fracture
Maxillary cysts more likely to become
infected diagnosed earlier
Displacement of teeth
15. Other
Displacement and destruction of the floor of orbit
Proptosis of eyeballs
Neurological symptoms
“Peripheral OKC” cysts occuring outside the
bone
Multiple cysts with or without naevoid basal cell
carcinoma syndrome
15
16. The naevoid basal cell carcinoma
syndrome
Gorlin and Goltz (1960) established the
association of
Multiple basal cell epitheliomas
Jaw cysts
Bifid ribs
Gorlin-Goltz Syndrome
16
17. Inherited as autosomal dominant
characteristics with strong penetrance
Other features include
Frontal bossing
Ocular hypertelorism
CNS and eye lesions
Keratocysts 65-75% cases
17
19. Recurrences
First pointed by Pindborg and Hansen, 1963
Various studies have shown recurrence rates
ranging from 3% to 62%
Mostly within first 5 years of surgery
Higher recurrence rate when cysts are located in
the angle or ascending ramus
Recurrences more frequent in patients with
Gorlin-Goltz syndrome
19
20. Cyst enucleated in one piece less
recurrence
Infection, fistula formation, bony
perforations more recurrence
Multilocular higher recurrence
20
21. 21
Suggested reason for recurrences
Occurrence of satellite cysts left behind
during enucleation
Thin and fragile lining difficult to enucleate
in toto
Epithelial lining of keratocysts have intrinsic
growth potential benign neoplasm
Recurrence from residual basal cell
proliferations
22. Radiological features
Small, round or ovoid, radiolucent areas
Sometimes more extensive
Well demarcated with distinct sclerotic borders
Unilocular or multilocular
May have scalloped margins
Expansion is seen late and may be buccal or
lingual
22
29. Mitotic activity more in suprabasal layer
Higher in patients with syndrome
Epithelial dysplasia
Fibrous capsule
usually thin with relatively few cells
stroma rich in mucopolysaccharide and
resembles mesenchymal connective tissue
29
30. Inflammatory cells
infrequent
mild infiltration of lymphocytes and monocytes
intense inflammation
epithelium looses its keratinised surface
thicken & develop rete processes or may ulcerate
30
36. Orthokeratinized variant
Previously thought to be a type of OKC
Due to characteristic histological
differences and a less aggressive clinical
course it is now thought to be a separate
entity “Orthokeratinized Odontogenic
Cyst(OOC)”
36
37. Histological differences between OKC
and OOC
OKC
Predominantly parakeratinized
lining
Basal cells cuboidal or columnar
Palisading of basal layer
Nuclei of basal cells show
hyperchromatism
Corrugated surface of the
epithelial lining
No hypergranulosis
OOC
Predominantly orthokeratinized
lining
Basal cells flat or low cuboidal
No palisading of basal cells
Basal cells do not show
hyperchromatism
Surface epithelium is flat with no
corrugations
Accentuated granular layer
37
39. Fluids from keratinising cysts have soluble
protein levels below 3.5gm / 100 ml
Values for non - keratinising cysts 5.0-11.09gm
per 100ml
Protein level of less than 4.0 gm / 100 ml indicate
a diagnosis of keratocyst
39
41. Clinical features
Frequently seen in new born infants
Rare after 3 months of age
Undergo involution and disappear
Rupture through the surface epithelium and exfoliate
Along the mid palatine raphe Epstein’s pearls
Buccal or lingual aspect of dental ridges Bohn’s
nodules
41
42. 42
2-3 mm in diameter
White or cream coloured
Single or multiple (usually 5 or 6)
43. Pathogenesis
Gingival cyst of infants
Arise from epithelial remnants of dental
lamina (cell rests of Serre)
These rests have the capacity to proliferate,
keratinize and form small cysts
43
44. 44
Midpalatal raphe cyst
Arise from epithelial inclusions along the line
of fusion of palatal folds and the nasal
process
Usually atrophy and get resorbed after birth
May persist to form keratin filled cysts
45. Histopathology
Round or ovoid
Smooth or undulating outline
Thin lining of stratified squamous
epithelium with parakeratotic surface
Cyst cavity filled with keratin
(concentric laminations with flat nuclei)
Flat basal cells
Epithelium lined clefts between cyst
and oral epithelium
Oral epithelium may be atrpohic
45
47. Clinical features
Frequency
0.5%
May be higher as all cases may not be submitted to
histopathological examination
Age
5th and 6th decade
Sex
No predilection
Site
Much more frequent in mandible
Premolar-canine region
47
48. 48
Clinical presentation
Soft and fluctuant
Well circumscribed, slowly enlarging, painless swelling
Attached gingiva or interdental papilla
Facial aspect
Usually less than 1 cm
Smooth surface
Colour of overlying mucosa normal or bluish
Adjacent teeth usually vital
Slight erosion of surface of the bone
51. Pathogenesis
Odontogenic epithelial cell rests
Traumatic implantation of surface epithelium
Cystic degeneration of deep projections of surface
epithelium
From glandular elements
Junctional epithelium
May be derived from reduced enamel epithelium
51
52. Histopathology
Extremely thin epithelium resembling REE
1-3 layers of flat to cuboidal cells
Darkly staining nuclei
Or
Thicker stratified squamous epithelium without rete ridges
52
53. 53
Epithelial cells may show
Pyknotic nuclei
Perinuclear cytoplasmic vacoulization
Atrophic with ghost outlines
Localized epithelial thickenings or plaques
Some protrude in the cystic lumen
Some extend into fibrous cyst wall
Cells
Whorled configuration
Compact and fusiform
Swollen and clear (water clear cells)
Low columnar cells on the surface of epithelium
origin from ameloblasts
57. 57
Cysts which occur in the lateral periodontal
position and in which an inflammatory etiology
and a diagnosis of collateral keratocyst have
been excluded on clinical and histopathological
grounds
58. Clinical features
Frequency
0.7%
Age
Prominent peak in the 6th decade
Sex
No sex predilection
Some studies show slight male preponderance
Site
Mandibular premolar area
Anterior maxilla
58
59. 59
Clinical presentation
Asymptomatic
Gingival swelling on facial aspect
Pain, tenderness on palpation
Consistency
Springy with egg shell crackling
Gelatinous feel
Associated teeth usually vital
60. Radiographic features
Round or oval, well circumscribed
radiolucency
Sclerotic margin
Between the apex and cervical
margin of tooth
Usually less than 1 cm in diameter
Mean growth 0.7mm per year
(Rasmusson, Magnusson, Borrman,
1991)
60
62. 62
Reduced enamel
epithelium
Arises initially as a
dentigerous cyst
developing by
expansion of the
follicle along the
lateral surface of
crown
63. Support of this hypothesis
LPC occur in areas where dentigerous cysts are
likely to be associated with vertically impacted
teeth
Epithelial plaques similar to those seen in LPC may
also be seen sometimes in dentigerous cysts
Cytokeratin 18 strongly expressed in LPC &
some dentigerous cysts (Hormia et al, 1987 &
Heikinheimo et al, 1989)
63
64. 64
Cell rests of dental lamina (Wysocki et al,
1980)
Cystic change in a single rest unicystic forms
Concomitant changes in several adjacent rests
polycystic
Support for this hypothesis
Limited growth potential of LPC derivation from
post functional cells of dental lamina
Glycogen containing clear cells seen in rests of
dental lamina may also be seen in LPC
65. Cell nests of Malassez
Occur in the periodontium
Well positioned for a lateral periodontal cyst
Has not received much support
65
67. 67
Localized plaques or
thickenings of the
epithelial lining
Extend into the
surrounding cyst wall
Mural bulges
Cells are some times
fusiform with long axis
parallal to basement
membrane
Cells of the plaque may
differentiate to take a
spinous shape
69. What produces this localized
proliferations??????
Spontaneous process occurring in odontogenic
epithelium
Odontogenic epithelium recapitulating
ontogeny under pathological conditions
Similar to early stages of tooth development
69
70. Small epithelial nests of follicles in the
fibrous cyst wall
Epithelial lining may separate from the cyst
wall
Areas of juxta-epithelial hyalinization of
collagen
Usually free of inflammation
70
71. Histochemical findings
Positive reactions foe
NADH2 and NADPH2 diphorase
Glutamate dehydrogenase
Lactate dehydrogenase
Unreactive for
Acid and alkaline phosphatase
71
72. Other findings
Melanin containing cells inn the epithelial lining
(Grand and Marwah, 1964)
Extensive granular cell change in the epithelial
lining granular-cell odontogenic cyst (Gold and
Christ, 1970)
72
74. First reported by Weathers and Waldron,
1973, who also proposed the name
resemblance to cluster of grapes
Variant of LPC
Microscopically similar to LPC with some
differences
74
75. Multilocular with thin fibrous connective tissue septe
Smaller cyst cavities are oriented towards the larger
ones
Usually lined by thin non-keratinized epithelium, 1-2
layer thick
In some areas thicker stratified squamous epithelium
75
76. Foci of plaque like thickenings
Flat fusiform cells
Clear cells are unusual
Plaques show convoluted zone on electron microscopic
examination similar to AOT (Greer & Johnson,
1988)
May arise from stratum intermedium
Strong expression of cytokeratin 18
76
79. Wide age range
Can occur in either jaws
Propensity to grow to a
large size and to recur
Radiologically
Unilocular or multilocular
Smooth or scalloped margin
79
80. Histologically
Non-keratinized stratified squamous epithelium
Chronic inflammatory infiltration of connective tissue wall
Superficial layer of epithelial lining
Columnar or cuboidal cells, occasionally with cilia
Glandular or pseudoglandular stucture
Intraepithelial crypts or microcysts
may open onto the surface of epithelium
Papillary or corrugated surface
80
81. 81
Numerous goblet cells may be present
Occasionally epithelium resembles REE
Epithelial thickenings or plaques may be present
Protrude into the cyst cavity
Extend into the connective tissue wall
Islands of odontogenic epithelium
Microcysts
Irregular calcifications