Primary mucosal melanoma of maxillary gingiva with metastasis: A rare case report with brief review of literature

Authors

  • Jimsha Vannathan Kumaran Department of Oral Medicine and Radiology, Mahatma Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Dental Sciences, Puducherry, India.
  • Mariappan Jonathan Daniel Department of Oral Medicine and Radiology, Mahatma Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Dental Sciences, Puducherry, India.
  • Mithunjith Krishnan 1 Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics, Indira Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Dental Sciences, SBV University, Puducherry, India
  • Divakar Seetharaman Department of Oral Medicine and Radiology, Mahatma Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Dental Sciences

Keywords:

Melanocytes, metastasis, primary malignant melanoma

Abstract

Primary malignant melanoma of the oral cavity is a rare neoplasm. Over 90% of melanoma occurs in skin,
but they may also arise from the mucosal surfaces or other sites where neural crest migrates. Intraorally,
the most common sites are the palate and gingiva followed by mandibular gingiva and lip mucosa. Oral
melanoma is initially asymptomatic. It may develop as a slowly growing mass and be present for months
or years before being noticed. Mucosal melanoma of the head and neck has poor prognosis, with the
survival of a patient with mucosal melanoma being less when compared with cutaneous melanoma, so
early diagnosis is important.

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Published

2022-08-18

How to Cite

Jimsha Vannathan Kumaran, Mariappan Jonathan Daniel, Mithunjith Krishnan, & Divakar Seetharaman. (2022). Primary mucosal melanoma of maxillary gingiva with metastasis: A rare case report with brief review of literature. International Journal of Clinicopathological Correlation, 1(2), 61–65. Retrieved from https://editorialmanager.in/index.php/ijcpc/article/view/397

Issue

Section

Case Report

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