Mosadomi A
Int J Oral Surg. 1975 Dec;4(6):219-24. doi: 10.1016/s0300-9785(75)80038-x.
Tumors, tumor-like lesions and cysts of the oral cavity and jaw bones seen over a 5-year period, 1969-1974, in the Department of Oral Surgery and Pathology, Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Lagos, Nigeria, are reviewed using the World Health Organization's guidelines for histologic classifications. The histopathologic distribution of the 286 lesions seen over this period was as follows: tumors of non-odontogenic tissues, 180 cases (62.9%); tumors of odontogenic tissue, 37 cases (12.9%); cysts and periapical granulomas, 67 cases (23.4%) and tumors of debatable odontogenic origin, two cases (0.8%). On the strength of available evidence, this report does not share the view that jaw tumors are more common among Africans; instead, the report's conclusion agrees with the "harvesting" theory: that jaw tumors, which are generally slow-growing, painless and non life-threatening, are "showing up" more at treatment centres throughout Africa, thus giving a clinician the chance to see many cases of jaw lesions over a relatively short time.
本文回顾了1969年至1974年期间,在尼日利亚拉各斯大学教学医院口腔外科与病理科所见到的口腔及颌骨肿瘤、肿瘤样病变和囊肿,并采用了世界卫生组织的组织学分类指南。在此期间所见的286例病变的组织病理学分布如下:非牙源性组织肿瘤180例(62.9%);牙源性组织肿瘤37例(12.9%);囊肿及根尖肉芽肿67例(23.4%);牙源性起源存疑的肿瘤2例(0.8%)。基于现有证据,本报告不认同颌骨肿瘤在非洲人当中更为常见的观点;相反,该报告的结论与“收获”理论相符:即颌骨肿瘤通常生长缓慢、无痛且不危及生命,因此在非洲各地的治疗中心“出现”得更多,从而使临床医生有机会在相对较短的时间内见到许多颌骨病变病例。