Abstract
The histopathology of metastatic lesions are usually the same as primary lesions in malignant tumors. We report a rare case of malignant melanoma that was mixed with a cervical lymph node metastatic lesion of undifferentiated cancer occurring in the maxillary gingiva. The patient was referred to our department because of pain in the area of the maxillary anterior teeth. After confirmation of undifferentiated cancer by biopsy, a right partial maxillectomy and extended supraomohyoid neck dissection were performed. Histopathological examination revealed that the primary lesion was undifferentiated cancer and the metastatic lesion was malignant melanoma. We suggested the possibility that a malignant melanoma of unknown primary origin and the undifferentiated cancer in the maxillary gingiva metastasized to the same cervical lymph node as a collision tumor.
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More From: Japanese Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
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