Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma

Tumefactive fibroinflammatory lesions (TFLs) are rare idiopathic benign fibrosclerosing lesions that clinically simulate a malignancy. TFLs are seen more frequently in males between 10 and 74 years of age. The usual site of involvement is the head and neck region, but rarely the extremities may be i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Promil Jain, Rajeev Sen, Nisha Sharma, Shilpi Bhargava, Virender Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 2017-03-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijms.sums.ac.ir/index.php/IJMS/article/view/1838
id doaj-734d51fef7cd40d0a54978f76afd2c18
record_format Article
spelling doaj-734d51fef7cd40d0a54978f76afd2c182020-11-25T02:51:32ZengShiraz University of Medical SciencesIranian Journal of Medical Sciences0253-07161735-36882017-03-01422205209Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma Promil Jain0Rajeev Sen1Nisha Sharma2Shilpi Bhargava3Virender Singh4Department of Pathology, Pt BDS PGIMS, University of Health Sciences, Rohtak, IndiaDepartment of Pathology, Pt BDS PGIMS, University of Health Sciences, Rohtak, IndiaDepartment of Pathology, Pt BDS PGIMS, University of Health Sciences, Rohtak, IndiaDepartment of Pathology, Pt BDS PGIMS, University of Health Sciences, Rohtak, IndiaDepartment of Oral Pathology, PGIDS, University of Health Sciences, Rohtak, IndiaTumefactive fibroinflammatory lesions (TFLs) are rare idiopathic benign fibrosclerosing lesions that clinically simulate a malignancy. TFLs are seen more frequently in males between 10 and 74 years of age. The usual site of involvement is the head and neck region, but rarely the extremities may be involved. Coexisting fibrosclerotic processes have been reported including retroperitoneal fibrosis, sclerosing cholangitis, sclerosing mediastinal fibrosis, and orbital pseudotumors. The etiology of this poorly understood entity remains unknown. Possible suggestions include exaggerated responses or autoimmune reactions to any chronic infection. The clinical and radiological appearance of TFLs is that of malignancy, but histopathology reveals them to be a benign process broadly classified under non-neoplastic, fibroinflammatory proliferations. The treatment strategies for these lesions are not well defined and variable and include steroids, surgery, and radiotherapy either alone or in combination. TFLs, albeit not fatal, have a high recurrence rate; patients should, therefore, be kept on long-term follow-up. We describe a young female patient presenting with a rapidly developing cheek swelling, which was diagnosed histopathologically as a TFLs.http://ijms.sums.ac.ir/index.php/IJMS/article/view/1838Tumefactive fibroinflammatory lesionSinusNeoplasms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Promil Jain
Rajeev Sen
Nisha Sharma
Shilpi Bhargava
Virender Singh
spellingShingle Promil Jain
Rajeev Sen
Nisha Sharma
Shilpi Bhargava
Virender Singh
Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma
Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences
Tumefactive fibroinflammatory lesion
Sinus
Neoplasms
author_facet Promil Jain
Rajeev Sen
Nisha Sharma
Shilpi Bhargava
Virender Singh
author_sort Promil Jain
title Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma
title_short Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma
title_full Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma
title_fullStr Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma
title_full_unstemmed Tumefactive Fibroinflammatory Lesion: A Diagnostic Dilemma
title_sort tumefactive fibroinflammatory lesion: a diagnostic dilemma
publisher Shiraz University of Medical Sciences
series Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences
issn 0253-0716
1735-3688
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Tumefactive fibroinflammatory lesions (TFLs) are rare idiopathic benign fibrosclerosing lesions that clinically simulate a malignancy. TFLs are seen more frequently in males between 10 and 74 years of age. The usual site of involvement is the head and neck region, but rarely the extremities may be involved. Coexisting fibrosclerotic processes have been reported including retroperitoneal fibrosis, sclerosing cholangitis, sclerosing mediastinal fibrosis, and orbital pseudotumors. The etiology of this poorly understood entity remains unknown. Possible suggestions include exaggerated responses or autoimmune reactions to any chronic infection. The clinical and radiological appearance of TFLs is that of malignancy, but histopathology reveals them to be a benign process broadly classified under non-neoplastic, fibroinflammatory proliferations. The treatment strategies for these lesions are not well defined and variable and include steroids, surgery, and radiotherapy either alone or in combination. TFLs, albeit not fatal, have a high recurrence rate; patients should, therefore, be kept on long-term follow-up. We describe a young female patient presenting with a rapidly developing cheek swelling, which was diagnosed histopathologically as a TFLs.
topic Tumefactive fibroinflammatory lesion
Sinus
Neoplasms
url http://ijms.sums.ac.ir/index.php/IJMS/article/view/1838
work_keys_str_mv AT promiljain tumefactivefibroinflammatorylesionadiagnosticdilemma
AT rajeevsen tumefactivefibroinflammatorylesionadiagnosticdilemma
AT nishasharma tumefactivefibroinflammatorylesionadiagnosticdilemma
AT shilpibhargava tumefactivefibroinflammatorylesionadiagnosticdilemma
AT virendersingh tumefactivefibroinflammatorylesionadiagnosticdilemma
_version_ 1724734088936423424