Abstract

IntroductionReactive hyperplastic lesions develop in response to a chronic injury simulating an exuberant tissue repair response. They represent some of the most common oral lesions including inflammatory fibrous hyperplasia, oral pyogenic granuloma, giant cell fibroma, peripheral ossifying fibroma, and peripheral giant cell lesions. ObjectiveThe incidence of those lesions was investigated in an oral pathology service, and the clinical characteristics, associated etiological factors, concordance between the clinical and histopathological diagnostic was determined. MethodsA total of 2400 patient records were screened from 2006 to 2016. Clinical features were recorded from biopsy reports and patients’ files. ResultsA total of 534 cases of reactive hyperplastic lesions were retrieved and retrospectively studied, representing 22.25% of all diagnoses. The most frequent lesion was inflammatory fibrous hyperplasia (72.09%), followed by oral pyogenic granuloma (11.79%), giant cell fibroma (7.30%), peripheral ossifying fibroma (5.24%), and peripheral giant cell lesions (3.55%). Females were predominantly affected (74.19%), the gingiva and alveolar ridge were the predominant anatomical site (32.89%), and chronic traumatism was presented as the main etiological factor. The age widely ranges from the 1st decade of life to the 7th. Clinically, the reactive hyperplastic lesions consisted of small lesions (0.5–2cm) and shared a strong likeness in color to the oral mucosa. The concordance between the clinical and histopathological diagnostic was high (82.5%). ConclusionReactive hyperplastic lesions had a high incidence among oral pathologies. The understanding of their clinical features helps to achieve a clearer clinical and etiological diagnosis, and the knowledge of factors related to their development. This may contribute to adequate treatment and positive prognosis.

Highlights

  • Reactive hyperplastic lesions develop in response to a chronic injury simulating an exuberant tissue repair response

  • The Reactive hyperplastic lesions (RHL) group is composed by Inflammatory Fibrous Hyperplasia (IFH), Oral Pyogenic Granuloma (OPG), Giant Cell Fibroma (GCF), Peripheral Ossifying Fibroma (POF), and Peripheral Giant Cell Lesions (PGCL)

  • Our findings revealed that RHL had a high incidence among oral pathologies

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Summary

Introduction

Reactive hyperplastic lesions develop in response to a chronic injury simulating an exuberant tissue repair response. They represent some of the most common oral lesions including inflammatory fibrous hyperplasia, oral pyogenic granuloma, giant cell fibroma, peripheral ossifying fibroma, and peripheral giant cell lesions. Reactive hyperplastic lesions (RHL) of the oral cavity may develop due to a low-intensity chronic irritation that stimulates an exuberant tissue repair response. This exuberant response produces a soft tissue enlargement similar to a diverse group of pathologic processes. Differential diagnosis includes hemangioma, Kaposi’s sarcoma, bacillary angiomatosis, angiosarcoma, and Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.[3]

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