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Diagnosis of Buccal Mucosal Squamous Cell Malignancy

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0:01

Hello everyone, Sidney Levy here,

0:03

continuing our discussion of the diagnosis

0:06

of oral cavity squamous cell malignancy.

0:09

I wanted to introduce our next area, which is the buccal

0:14

mucosa by, uh, reminding people of relevant anatomy in

0:17

this region and discussing one or two important techniques

0:21

that may help in diagnosing these often subtle lesions.

0:25

So I have an example case here with a buccal mucosal

0:29

squamous cell malignancy on the left, outlined as such.

0:34

But I'd like to focus on the anatomy on the right

0:37

to help show the normal appearance to assist you

0:41

in deciding whether a lesion is present or not.

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The right gingivobuccal sulcus is a line,

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hypointense line, right on the lateral

0:50

margin of the maxillary or mandibular teeth.

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Then on the pre-contrast T1 weighted imaging, there

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is a buccal fat plane, which is very important because

1:01

if this plane is infiltrated by hypointense tissue,

1:08

that is an early feature of buccal mucosal malignancy.

1:12

And then the next structure that's important

1:14

to be aware of is the buccinator muscle,

1:17

which is external to the buccal fat.

1:20

And that's important for staging purposes.

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These are components of the so

1:25

called buccal deep neck space.

1:28

So as you can quickly appreciate, uh, the lesion on the

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contralateral left-hand side has obliterated these layers.

1:38

Now, it's easy enough in this case, but in a subtle

1:42

early T1 or T2 stage lesion, that infiltration

1:47

of the buccal fat is very important to look for.

1:50

This will be a prelude to a more formal

1:52

discussion of the diagnosis of this tumor.

1:55

One last thing.

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An important technique to keep in mind is the puffed cheek

2:01

method for CT and MR imaging, but particularly CT imaging.

2:06

And this can help to elucidate whether a lesion is

2:10

arising from the buccal mucosa or the alveolar mucosa.

2:15

So let me demonstrate that for you because in the

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natural state, the gingivobuccal sulcus is collapsed.

2:22

You can't really distinguish clearly

2:25

a difference between where the buccal

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mucosa ends and the alveolar mucosa begins.

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The alveolar mucosa being the mucosa lining

2:34

the gums, and the buccal mucosa lining

2:38

the cheeks and the side of the mouth.

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So the puffed cheek method consists of a closed

2:42

Valsalva maneuver, which I'll demonstrate for you now.

2:47

And this helps to create air, hypointense air, between

2:53

the buccal and the alveolar mucosa, which can be

2:55

very helpful in localizing a lesion in this region.

3:00

With MR, it is more difficult because people

3:03

need to stay still during the acquisition.

3:06

So some have tried to insert hypointense gauze packing

3:11

between the alveolar mucosa of the gums and the buccal

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mucosa of the lining of the cheeks with some success.

3:19

So that's an alternative method.

3:22

We will go on in our next vignette to formally discuss

3:26

the diagnosis and staging of this tumor.

3:30

Thank you.

Report

Description

Faculty

Sidney Levy, PhD, MBBS

Radiologist and Nuclear Medicine Specialist

I-MED

Tags

PET

Oral Cavity/Oropharynx

Nuclear Medicine

Neuroradiology

Neuro

Neoplastic

MRI

Head and Neck

CT

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