Lingual Mandibular Bone Depression

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Lingual Mandibular Bone Depression. / Friedrich, Reinhard; Barsukov, Evgeny; Kohlrusch, Felix K; Zustin, Josef; Hagel, Christian; Speth, Ulrike; Vollkommer, Tobias; Gosau, Martin.

in: IN VIVO, Jahrgang 34, Nr. 5, PMID: 32871782 , 2020, S. 2527-2541.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Friedrich, R, Barsukov, E, Kohlrusch, FK, Zustin, J, Hagel, C, Speth, U, Vollkommer, T & Gosau, M 2020, 'Lingual Mandibular Bone Depression', IN VIVO, Jg. 34, Nr. 5, PMID: 32871782 , S. 2527-2541.

APA

Friedrich, R., Barsukov, E., Kohlrusch, F. K., Zustin, J., Hagel, C., Speth, U., Vollkommer, T., & Gosau, M. (2020). Lingual Mandibular Bone Depression. IN VIVO, 34(5), 2527-2541. [PMID: 32871782 ].

Vancouver

Friedrich R, Barsukov E, Kohlrusch FK, Zustin J, Hagel C, Speth U et al. Lingual Mandibular Bone Depression. IN VIVO. 2020;34(5):2527-2541. PMID: 32871782 .

Bibtex

@article{e2a76379898a4b6b8fd100971804562d,
title = "Lingual Mandibular Bone Depression",
abstract = "Background/aim: In the area of the jaw angle, osteolytic lesions can occur, the differential diagnosis of which can be difficult and require very different therapeutic measures. One of these lesions is lingual mandibular bone depression (LMBD). The aim of this study was to present the characteristics of the lesion in a group of LMBD patients and to differentiate it from other lesions.Patients and methods: Radiological images of 21 patients with LMBD were examined.Results: The majority of LMBDs were located in the jaw angle. On cross-sectional images, the lesion could be distinguished from salivary tissue (n=2). One case of LMBD had an impact on the course of the fracture line in the mandibular trauma.Conclusion: LMBD is a developmental disorder of the mandible and only rarely of pathological importance. Imaging the lesion with cross-sectional images is preferable to using plain X-ray projections. In some cases, surgical exploration is essential for diagnosis.Keywords: Mandible; Stafne's bone cavity; anatomy; bone tumor; differential diagnosis; fracture; imaging; lingual mandibular bone depression; vascularization.",
author = "Reinhard Friedrich and Evgeny Barsukov and Kohlrusch, {Felix K} and Josef Zustin and Christian Hagel and Ulrike Speth and Tobias Vollkommer and Martin Gosau",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "2527--2541",
journal = "IN VIVO",
issn = "0258-851X",
publisher = "International Institute of Anticancer Research",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lingual Mandibular Bone Depression

AU - Friedrich, Reinhard

AU - Barsukov, Evgeny

AU - Kohlrusch, Felix K

AU - Zustin, Josef

AU - Hagel, Christian

AU - Speth, Ulrike

AU - Vollkommer, Tobias

AU - Gosau, Martin

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Background/aim: In the area of the jaw angle, osteolytic lesions can occur, the differential diagnosis of which can be difficult and require very different therapeutic measures. One of these lesions is lingual mandibular bone depression (LMBD). The aim of this study was to present the characteristics of the lesion in a group of LMBD patients and to differentiate it from other lesions.Patients and methods: Radiological images of 21 patients with LMBD were examined.Results: The majority of LMBDs were located in the jaw angle. On cross-sectional images, the lesion could be distinguished from salivary tissue (n=2). One case of LMBD had an impact on the course of the fracture line in the mandibular trauma.Conclusion: LMBD is a developmental disorder of the mandible and only rarely of pathological importance. Imaging the lesion with cross-sectional images is preferable to using plain X-ray projections. In some cases, surgical exploration is essential for diagnosis.Keywords: Mandible; Stafne's bone cavity; anatomy; bone tumor; differential diagnosis; fracture; imaging; lingual mandibular bone depression; vascularization.

AB - Background/aim: In the area of the jaw angle, osteolytic lesions can occur, the differential diagnosis of which can be difficult and require very different therapeutic measures. One of these lesions is lingual mandibular bone depression (LMBD). The aim of this study was to present the characteristics of the lesion in a group of LMBD patients and to differentiate it from other lesions.Patients and methods: Radiological images of 21 patients with LMBD were examined.Results: The majority of LMBDs were located in the jaw angle. On cross-sectional images, the lesion could be distinguished from salivary tissue (n=2). One case of LMBD had an impact on the course of the fracture line in the mandibular trauma.Conclusion: LMBD is a developmental disorder of the mandible and only rarely of pathological importance. Imaging the lesion with cross-sectional images is preferable to using plain X-ray projections. In some cases, surgical exploration is essential for diagnosis.Keywords: Mandible; Stafne's bone cavity; anatomy; bone tumor; differential diagnosis; fracture; imaging; lingual mandibular bone depression; vascularization.

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 34

SP - 2527

EP - 2541

JO - IN VIVO

JF - IN VIVO

SN - 0258-851X

IS - 5

M1 - PMID: 32871782

ER -