Abstract

In neoplasms Peripheral Odontogenic Tumors(POT) are one of the rare to occur on gingiva, among them, Peripheral Odontogenic Fibroma (POdF) is the most common. A plethora of lesions sharing similar clinical features, makes the diagnosis difcult. POdF is a benign, slow-growing, smooth, exophytic, painless lesion but it may show diverse clinical presentation as erythematous, lobulated, rapidly growing mass which might be tender on palpation overlapping the features with various inammatory gingival conditions to even a gingival squamous cell carcinoma.This results into diagnostic enigma. Histopathologoical examination plays a vital role in these type of cases. Discussed here is a case of POdF mimicking gingival squamous cell carcinoma. Histopathological investigation showed presence of odontogenic epithelium and dystrophic calcication which are the pathognomonic features of POdF. After surgical removal,POdF is seen to recur but, the exact recurrence rate cannot be estimated due to scarcity of reported cases.

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