Abstract
Intraosseous hemangiomas appear only infrequently in skeletal areas other than the head and neck. Especially, the jaw lesions occur more frequently in the mandible than in the maxilla. The patient’s first complaint is usually that there is a slowly enlarging distortion of the facial contour or, if the hemangioma erodes the cortical bone around the teeth, spontaneous bleeding from the gingiva. With large lesions, the alignment of the teeth can be disrupted. For our case, the patient was a 12-year-old male, and his right mandibular body area had a well-circumscribed radiolucent lesion with a trabecular pattern.
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