| Literature DB >> 35431534 |
Nasreen Alli1, Marshall Murdoch2, Shabnum Meer3.
Abstract
Background: Cosmetic dermal fillers are a sought-after procedure globally. However, despite the safety claims of filler materials by the manufacturers, adverse reactions still occur. Case presentation: This case report is of a 66-year-old female who presented with a late-onset complication of a hyaluronic acid dermal filler that clinically mimicked a salivary gland neoplasm. The patient presented with firm peri-oral swellings of short duration that clinically mimicked a pleomorphic adenoma and mucoepidermoid carcinoma. The diagnosis was that of a foreign-body granulomatous response to dermal fillers. Although other mimics of a similar nature are reported a knowledgeable clinician, careful choice of filler material, knowledge of the product, thorough pre-procedural history taking and post-procedural patient follow-up can drastically minimize a possible misdiagnosis. The reaction was treated with a combination of hyaluronidase, betamethasone and 5-flurouracil intra-lesional injections monthly for 11 consecutive months, with total clinical resolution. Conclusions: Patient education of the procedure, product name and the possibility of an adverse reaction occurring, even years later or at a site distant to the initial site of placement, is vital. Further, we review the recent reported adverse association of the new mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and dermal filler placement.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse reaction mRNA COVID-19 vaccines; Adverse reaction natural dermal fillers; Dermal fillers; Hyaluronic acid; Soft tissue injectables
Year: 2022 PMID: 35431534 PMCID: PMC8996220 DOI: 10.1186/s42269-022-00791-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull Natl Res Cent ISSN: 1110-0591
Fig. 1Submucosal fibroadipose tissue almost entirely effaced by multiple empty spaces and large pools of pale staining eosinophilic material (A) eliciting a prominent foreign-body giant cell granulomatous response (B). Non-necrotizing granulomatous inflammation with numerous multinucleated foreign-body giant cells (C, arrowed) surround the pale pink stained material (D) (H&E stain; original magnification × 200 (A, B). × 400 (C, D)
Reported adverse granulomatous reactions to dermal fillers mimicking salivary gland neoplasia
| Reference | Cumulative unique reported cases ( | Filler type | Differential diagnosis | Histologic/cytologic/clinical mimic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pinheiro et al. ( | 1 | PMMA | Pleomorphic adenoma | Clinical |
| Eversole et al. ( | 2 | HA | Mucoepidermoid carcinoma | Histologic |
| Davis et al. ( | 3 | HA | Mucoepidermoid carcinoma | Cytologic |
| Farahani et al. ( | 4 | HA | Adenoma | Clinical |
| Shahrabi-Farahani et al. ( | 5 | HA | Sclerotic minor salivary gland | Clinical |
| Tamiolakis et al. ( | 6 | HA | Salivary gland tumor | Clinical |
| 7 | Liquid silicone | Mucocele | Clinical | |
| Mandel et al. ( | 8 | Silicone | Parotid gland swelling | Clinical |