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Is Sinus Lesion Cancerous or Benign?By: Question : Eleven years ago, an X-ray showed a large (about the diameter of a dime) round growth above my upper right teeth, apparently in a sinus. My dentist consulted an oral surgeon, who told her it was a mucocele and I shouldn't worry unless it caused sinus infections or other problems. I do have some occasional sinus infections but not enough to make me want surgery. In the last month I have had five nosebleeds that were difficult to stop, also on the right side. The latest X-ray continues to show the growth, only it looks a little bigger. Could this be a mucocele or something else? Could the growth and the bleeds be related? S. Answer : I suspect that your oral surgeon was almost correct. These little guys are more correctly called mucus retention cysts, and they rarely require surgical intervention. Unlike mucoceles, which lack a true "wall," mucus retention cysts have a very well-defined boundary. Think of them as water balloons (or, uh, mucus balloons) and you will have a pretty good grasp on the situation. You state that the lesion looks only "a little bigger" on the latest X-ray. This supports the diagnosis of a mucus retention cyst. Could it be something else? Of course it could -- and the list of possible "something elses" is long. Since you are having nosebleeds, your unspoken fear is that this lesion is actually a cancer. However, if it has grown only slightly in the last 11 years, cancer is a very unlikely diagnosis. Unlikely ... but not impossible. Some benign tumors may give rise to a cancer after many, many years of innocent behavior. One such tumor that arises in the nose and sinuses is the polyp-like inverted papilloma. Since some benign lesions can occasionally turn evil, I cannot tell you, "Hey, don't worry about it!"
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Advice from Dr. Nancy Snyderman
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