Four atypical cases of misdiagnosed facial cutaneous sinuses of dental origin.

Minerva Dent Oral Sci

Section of Dentistry, Department of Neurosciences, University of Padua, Padua, Italy.

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Odontogenic cutaneous sinus tracts are often misdiagnosed as non-dental issues due to their unusual presentation and lack of dental symptoms, leading to ineffective treatments.
  • Four patients with recurrent facial sinus tracts underwent examinations and were found to have dental issues as the cause, resulting in tooth extractions.
  • Following the extractions, all patients saw improvements in healing and closure of their sinus tracts, highlighting the importance of considering dental origins in such cases for effective treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: Odontogenic cutaneous sinus tracts are frequently misdiagnosed as cutaneous non-dental related pathologies, due to their lack of a typical morphology, their extraoral location, and the frequent absence of concomitant dental symptoms. An erroneous diagnosis may lead to long-lasting, invasive, and not resolutive surgical and medical treatments.

Methods: Four patients referred to our department lamenting the presence of a recurrent facial cutaneous sinus tract. They all had already had different wrong diagnoses and were treated with not resolutive therapies or surgeries. After a clinical and radiographical oral examination, the cutaneous fistulas were found to have a dental etiology, and the extraction of the compromised tooth was performed.

Results: One week after the tooth extraction, all the patients presented good healing of the intraoral mucosa. At the long-term follow-up in all four cases, the definitive closure of the extraoral sinus tract and a reduction of the scar was found.

Conclusions: If a facial sinus tract is present, the odontogenic etiology should always be considered, since it can easily bring to the correct diagnosis, leading to a rapid resolution of the fistula. Once the dental origin has been confirmed, the suggested treatment for a conclusive resolution of the cutaneous sinus tract is the endodontic treatment or the extraction of the affected tooth.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.23736/S2724-6329.21.04559-9DOI Listing

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