| Literature DB >> 35450231 |
Sanjeev Kumar1, Sunil Kumar1, Varun Arya1, Fatema Bootwala1, Vatsala Ranganathan1, Rishabh Thakker1, Aasimah Hameed1, Susmita Saxena2.
Abstract
Salivary sialolithiasis is a well-known cause for obstructive disease of the submandibular and parotid glands. However, the condition frequently occurs unilaterally, and it is uncommon to find a patient reporting with stones in both submandibular or parotid glands. Children below the age of 16 years rarely suffer from salivary stones. Thus, bilateral sialoliths in a child are extremely rare, with only four previous cases been reported in the literature. This is an additional case report of bilateral submandibular sialolithiasis occurring in the hilar area in a 13-year-old boy. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Bilateral salivary stones; pediatric; sialolithiasis; transoral sialolithotomy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35450231 PMCID: PMC9017825 DOI: 10.4103/jomfp.jomfp_444_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oral Maxillofac Pathol ISSN: 0973-029X
Figure 1Preoperative view of patient showing the diffuse swelling in the right submandibular region
Figure 2Coronal section showing calcifications in the submandibular gland hilar region bilaterally
Figure 3Intraoperative view showing the stone within the hilum
Cases of pediatric bilateral sialoliths reported till date
| Cases | Publication | Age | Sex | Symptom | Location | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bodner and Fliss (1995) | 16 | Male | Pain | Right - Proximal duct | Transoral sialolithotomy |
| 2 | Waseem and Forte (2005) | 11 | Female | Pain and swelling | Right - Proximal duct | Conservative |
| 3 | Kim, Park, Son and Woo (2012) | 15 | Male | Postprandial bilateral swelling | Right - Hilum | Transoral simultaneous bilateral sialolithotomy |
| 4 | Yoshii, Iwai, Sugiyama | 7 | Male | Swelling L gland | Right - Hilum migrated to papilla | Transoral bilateral consecutive papillotomy |
| 5 | Present case (2020) | 13 | Male | Swelling R gland | Right - Hilum | Transoral R. sialolithotomy |