JOURNAL OF ORAL SCIENCE
Vol. 47 No. 4      DECEMBER - 2005
ISSN: 1343-4934      UBIC: 152-A
Abstract
A 54-year-old male presented with the complaint of a painful sore on the left side of his tongue. Our examination found an ulcer 15 x 20 mm in size on the left edge of the tongue, with peripheral indurations. The lesion was diagnosed histopathologically as squamous cell carcinoma (T2N0M0). Consequently, the lesion was surgical removed and radical neck dissection was performed. Four months after the operation, two unusual cyst-like lesions were identified in the parapharyngeal space by CT and MRI. A biopsy specimen revealed recurrent carcinoma with a cyst-like structure. The route of the tumor metastasis into the parapharyngeal space was obscured, but it was speculated that the excessive lymph accumulation was due to a lymphatic occlusion caused by the surgical procedure, proliferation of the metastatic carcinoma, or stagnation and accumulation of tissue fluid caused by parapharyngeal invasion by the recurrent lesion. (J. Oral Sci. 47, 219-222, 2005)
Keywords: tongue carcinoma; cervical recurrence; cyst-like lesion; CT; MRI; SCC.

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