Cureus | 2021
Cemento-Ossifying Fibroma of Upper Lip in a Female Child
Abstract
Cemento-ossifying fibroma (COF) is a benign tumor classified under fibro-osseous lesions characterized by the proliferation of fibrous tissue associated with the presence of osteoid or cementicle-like masses. COF of bony origin is highly neoplastic in nature compared to their soft tissue counterparts which are relatively rare. The authors here present a case report of COF arising from the left upper lip in a 10-year-old female patient. The lesion was initially asymptomatic, slow-growing in nature, and later turned painful over a period of eight months. A medical CT was taken to elicit a calcified mass seen at the left subcutaneous plane of the upper lip. The lesion was surgically treated by complete excision under local anaesthesia and sutured. Follow-up was done for a period of one year to assess for recurrence which was not evident in this case. This case report, being a peculiar case of COF arising from the soft tissue of the upper lip, describes the clinical presentation, diagnostic imaging, histopathological evidence, and brief surgical management of the lesion.