The true alveolar tumour is to be diagnosed from a mass of redundant granulations such as may form in relation to a carious tooth, from a polypus or an epithelioma of the gum, a tumour of the body of the jaw, or an angioma.
The treatment consists in removing the tumour together with a wedge-shaped or quadrilateral portion of the alveolar process from which it grows. A dental plate should be fitted to fill up the gap in the alveolus. After such free removal these tumours show little tendency to recur and metastases are rare.
Malignant Tumours of the Maxilla.—All varieties of sarcoma and carcinoma are met with; of the former, the round and spindle-celled are the most common. Carcinoma occurs chiefly in two forms, less commonly a columnar epithelioma arising from glandular epithelium, much more commonly a squamous epithelioma either originating within the antrum and causing its expansion, or spreading to the maxilla from the mucous membrane of the nose or mouth. Clinically it is practically impossible to differentiate sarcoma from carcinoma; in the later stages the infection of the glands below the mandible is more marked in carcinoma. An important point to determine is whether the growth arises within the maxilla or has spread to it from adjacent parts, such as the base of the skull, the nose, or the palate. In this the X-rays are helpful. Their malignancy is evidenced by the rapidity of their growth, the manner in which they infiltrate adjacent parts, and the frequency with which they recur after removal. They occur at all ages, and have been met with even in children.
The clinical features vary according to whether the tumour originates on the anterior aspect of the bone, in the maxillary antrum, or on the posterior aspect.
When the tumour originates in the periosteum covering the front of the bone, it forms a swelling under the cheek, usually in the vicinity of the zygomatic (malar) bone, and grows towards the mouth as well as towards the surface. The cheek is gradually invaded, and in some cases the growth extends into the maxillary sinus.
The typical malignant tumour of the upper jaw originates in the lining membrane of the antrum; it first fills the cavity and then bulges its walls in every direction, so that, on pressure being made over the swelling, the osseous shell of the sinus dimples and crackles under the finger. The sinus is dark on trans-illumination. The tumour may obstruct the nostril on the same side, and, by pressing on the tear duct, may cause the tears to flow over the cheek. It may be seen through the anterior nares, and may be attended with a sanious discharge from the nose. The eyeball is liable to be displaced upward, and if the ethmoid cells are invaded, it is also pushed outward; the palate may be depressed and the cheek projected ([Figs. 250], [251]).
Fig. 250.—Sarcoma of the Maxilla.