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ISSN (Print) 1013-9052
EISSN 1658-3558

The Saudi Dental Journal,
P.O. Box 52500,
Riyadh 11563,
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Tel.
966-1-467-7328
Fax.
933-1-467-7308 /
966-1-467-7534
Email
saudidj@ksu.edu.sa

Keratins In Ameloblastomas, Developing Tooth, Oral

Epithelium And Dentigerous Cysts


Salwa F. Younis, BDS, HDD, PhD*, Sahar El Barrawi, BDS, HDD, PhD**
*College of Dentistry, King Saud University, P.O. Box 60169, Riyadh 11545, Saudi Arabia.
** Professor of Oral Pathology, University  of Alexandria, Alexandria, Egypt.

There is remarkably little pertinent information available about the correlation between oral epithelium and the possible role in the etiology of dentigerous cysts and ameloblastomas (benign or malignant). Monoclonal antibodies, the wide spectrum screening type was applied on paraffin section, using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) procedure. Seven human embryonic cap, bell-stage teeth with the associated dental lamina and oral epithelium, eleven cases of ameloblastoma including three malignant cases, and seven cases of dentigerous cysts were immunocytochemically studied. Keratin profiles were similar in distribution in ameloblastoma (benign and malignant), the mature oral epithelium and dentigerous cysts. The reaction was strong in the malignant ameloblastoma while the dental organs, thin non-keratinized embryonic oral epithelium and dental lamina displayed negative reaction. Interestingly, certain individual cells revealed negative reaction at the stratified squamous adult oral epithelium. These clear negative cells were also present in ameloblastoma. Since the keratin reaction is related to the development and differentiation of tissues and was negative in the thin non-keratinized epithelium, dental lamina, dental organ but positive in adult epithelium and ameloblastoma, it seems that both dental organs and dental lamina are the principal origin of ameloblastoma and dentigerous cysts.

Saudi Dental Journal 1993;5(3):136-141.

 
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