Fibrous Dysplasia of Maxilla
Fibrous dysplasia of the facial skeleton commonly involves the maxilla. It commonly involves one maxilla. CT scan shows a lesion that is confined to the bone with no soft tissue component. It is helpful in distinguishing fibrous dysplasia from a malignancy. Features of malignancy include osteolysis, destruction of sclerotic margins, and cortical destruction with soft tissue extension. The bony lesion shows a homogenous matrix with obliteration of maxillary sinus cavity.
Fibrous Dysplasia of Maxilla
Reviewed by Sumer Sethi
on
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
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![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgxn-KRY-pHRYLlnmPzj0E9aZa0t9JD5lRScxsacsatVoCRl-kHQDbI4-7AOhHErR7ZifxxUIIDpLKs8I_YzJpSqgX-vQcx3xrKzYl-iOY5VcDxeusWwH0UEmBoXrVCCfahtTcS/s72-c/FD+maxilla.jpg)
1 comment:
Is there any alternative option for the cure of "fibrous dysplasia of maxilla" except surgery..???
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