## Summary Of 37 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the floor of the mouth seen during a 5-year period, 28 were treated primarily by surgery. Ten of the 28 patients presented with midline cancers measuring between 1ยท0 and 3 cm (T1 and T2). Three of these patients had local excision only. Meta
The role of suprahyoid neck dissection in the management of cancer of the tongue and floor of the mouth
โ Scribed by Donegan, J. Oliver ;Gluckman, Jack L. ;Crissman, John D.
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1982
- Weight
- 352 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-6403
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Suprahyoid lymph node dissection often is used as part of the surgical treatment of cancers of the anterior two thirds of the tongue and the floor of the mouth. In recent years the use of this procedure has become less widespread, but it is still advocated by some surgeons as a sound operation in the treatment of cancer. Anatomic, roentgenographic, and pathologic evidence is presented to show that this may not be the case. The evidence points out that such neoplasms do not metastasize in an orderly or predictable pattern. These patients may have isolated metastases in any region of the neck. If the decision is made to treat the neck in these situations, the whole neck should be treated. We feel that suprahyoid neck dissection has a very limited role to play in the management of cancers of the anterior two thirds of the tongue and the floor of the mouth and should be employed only when it will be of help in developing an adequate margin around the primary lesion.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The efficacy of suprahyoid block dissection combined with radiotherapy, in the management of neck nodal disease was evaluated in 15 patients with carcinoma of the floor of mouth (abutting on the mandible) between 1983 and 1989. Ten males and 5 females had a mean age of 60.3 years. Suprahyoid block d
A case-control study of cancer of the oral tongue and floor of mouth was conducted in Kerala, Southern India, on 228 cases and 453 hospital-based controls, matched for age, sex and religion. We studied pan(bete1)-tobacco-chewing, bidi (local type of cigarette)-and-cigarette-smoking, alcohol-drinking