INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ORAL-MEDICAL SCIENCES | |
Vol. 7 No. 2 December - 2008 | |
ISSN: 1347-9733 UBIC: 136-M | |
Abstract | |
Epulis, a relatively common benign polypoid lesion of the gingiva, may be pathologically classified into several subtypes. Although an epulis
is thought to be reactive cell proliferation in the gingiva to various stimuli, the mechanism of pathogenesis is unclear. The present study examined histopathological
and immunohistochemical analyses to elucidate the cell proliferation in epulis osteoplastica (n=8) using Ki67 monoclonal antibody MIB-1 as a marker of proliferation
and compared that to cell proliferation in epulis fibrosa (n=8). Epulis osteoplastica consisted of massive, trabecular, or woven bone formation surrounded by a
proliferation of fibroblasts and blood vessels with minimal inflammatory cell infiltration under the mucosal squamous epithelium. Scanty osteoblastic lining was
observed around the bone. Epulis fibrosa was composed of a proliferation of fibroblasts, collagen fibers, and blood vessels with minimal inflammatory cell infiltration;
no evidence of bone formation was found. Immunohistochemically, positive reactivities for MIB-1 were observed in the fibroblasts of epulis osteoplastica and epulis
fibrosa, although positive cell rates were higher in epulis osteoplastica than in epulis fibrosa. The findings suggest that epulis osteoplastica has neoplasm-like
characteristics unlike epulis fibrosa.
Keywords: epulis, proliferation, MIB-1, immunohistochemistry. |
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