Published in:
Open Access
01-12-2018 | Case report
Epithelioid cell granuloma with caseating necrosis possibly caused by periapical periodontitis: a case report
Authors:
Risa Shimizu, Kae Tanaka, Yu Oikawa, Hirofumi Tomioka, Kou Kayamori, Tohru Ikeda, Takatomo Yoshioka, Arata Ebihara, Hiroyuki Harada
Published in:
Journal of Medical Case Reports
|
Issue 1/2018
Login to get access
Abstract
Background
Epithelioid cell granuloma with caseating necrosis is a typical pathological finding in tuberculosis. While specific inflammation, including that related to tuberculosis, can induce caseating granuloma formation, there have been very few reports on the induction of caseating granuloma by non-specific inflammation. Chronic periapical periodontitis is usually related to bacterial biofilm formation as well as fungal or viral infection in the periapical lesion. However, it is difficult to eliminate these extraradicular pathogenic microbes by normal endodontic therapy alone, and more invasive surgical removal is almost always required.
Case presentation
Here we describe the case of a 30-year-old Japanese woman who had suffered from dull pain related to periapical periodontitis for approximately 10 years. Although the causal tooth had been previously extracted at the Department of Oral Surgery of another hospital in 2015, inflammation of the surrounding tissue had not abated. She was referred to our hospital in May 2016 and underwent surgical debridement via an intra/extraoral approach under general anesthesia. A caseating granuloma accompanied by a small amount of fungi was histopathologically confirmed in the excised specimen. Her inflammation has not been exacerbated since the operation.
Conclusions
This is the first report in which non-specific inflammation is shown to induce caseating granuloma arising in the jaw. Our report also highlights the importance of sufficient root canal treatment during the first stage of the procedure.