AI Article Synopsis

  • Schwannomas are benign tumors that mainly arise from Schwann cells and are particularly rare when found in the palate, making extensive studies on this specific type limited.
  • In reviewing previous cases, including a new one involving a 16-year-old female, researchers found a total of 46 palatal schwannoma cases published since 1985, indicating a slight female predominance and a tendency for the hard palate to be more affected than the soft palate.
  • Surgical excision is the preferred treatment approach, with very few cases showing recurrence or malignant changes, and while imaging helps in diagnostics, the definitive diagnosis relies on pathological examination.

Article Abstract

 Schwannomas are benign tumors originating from differentiated Schwann cells. Being the least common intraoral neoplasm of neural origin, it is rarely seen in the palate. The literature lacks an extensive review of intraoral schwannoma confined to the palate.  To review previously reported cases of palatal schwannoma along with an illustrative case, and to provide a better insight regarding clinicopathological and radiological features of this neural tumor in a rare intraoral site.  We present a case of palatal schwannoma in a 16-year-old female. An additional 45 cases were identified in 2 medical database searches (PubMed and Google Scholar) published from the year 1985 onwards, and from 13 countries, in the 5 continents. The ages of the patients ranged from 3 to 84 years old. Palatal schwannoma showed a slight predilection to females, with a male/female ratio of ∼ 1:1.81. Hard palate involvement is almost twice greater than soft palate involvement. Surgical excision was employed in almost all of the cases, and recurrence was reported only once.  Palatal schwannomas, although rare, have been reported both over the hard and the soft palate. They mostly present as a painless, firm, well-encapsulated, slow-growing solitary lesion over the lateral palatal aspect. Imaging can add to suspicion and can delineate a differential diagnosis, but the diagnosis is confirmed by pathological examination. Fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) is almost always inconclusive. Immunohistochemistry can assist in confirming a diagnosis, but is more important to rule out close differentials. Complete surgical excision is the treatment of choice, and recurrence or malignant transformation are extremely rare.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6660292PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0039-1692635DOI Listing

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