Paul M. Speight

Shear's Cysts of the Oral and Maxillofacial Regions


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source – the reduced enamel epithelium.

Photo depicts gross specimen of a paradental cyst on the buccal aspect of a partially erupted third molar, which has been received intact.

      Source: Courtesy of Prof G.T. Craig.

      These studies suggest that inflammatory collateral cysts are equivalent to a dilated follicle or pocket lined by hyperplastic and proliferative epithelium derived from reduced enamel (follicular) epithelium. Thus, a descriptive designation of ‘inflammatory pocket cyst’ may be appropriate, and Slater (2003 ) has suggested that the third molar lesions should be called ‘eruption pocket cysts’. It is possible that swelling associated with inflammation leads to occlusion of the opening of the pocket, thus allowing accumulation of debris and cyst growth by osmotic pressure in a similar process to that described for radicular cysts.

      From this discussion it can be seen that there is agreement that collateral cysts are of inflammatory origin and that the initiating factor is inflammation within the pericoronal tissues of an erupting or partially erupted tooth. However, pericoronitis is common and this pathogenic process does not easily explain why paradental and mandibular buccal bifurcation cysts are so rare.

      Colgan et al. (2002 ) suggested that food impaction may have an important part to play. In 13 of their 15 cases the associated tooth was opposed by a maxillary molar and they proposed that the angulation of the affected tooth (usually distal) could promote food impaction into the pericoronal tissues around the crown. As further evidence for this they showed that four cases contained giant cells consistent with a foreign body reaction.

      With regard to the mandibular buccal bifurcation cyst, studies have shown that the affected tooth is almost always tilted buccally (Figure 4.4), giving prominence to the lingual cusps and often associated with increased pocket depth on the buccal aspect (Pompura et al. 1997 ; Philipsen et al. 2004 ). Stoneman and Worth (1983 ) suggested that the mesio‐buccal cusp of the first molar is the first to penetrate the oral mucosa during eruption, and that this would explain the buccal location of the cyst, but this explanation is at odds with the fact that the lingual cusps may erupt first in the buccally displaced tooth. However, it is not known whether this buccal inclination occurs as a result of displacement of the tooth by the cyst, or is present at eruption and may thus predispose to cyst formation. Since the cysts are rare, it is most likely that the associated tooth is buccally displaced at eruption and that this predisposes to inflammation in a buccal pocket and subsequent cyst formation. It is possible that the prominence of the lingual cusps and the buccal inclination may predispose to food impaction on the buccal aspect.

      As discussed previously (see ‘Frequency’), there is evidence that some clinicians and pathologists do not recognise the paradental cyst as an entity, but rather regard it as a variant of dentigerous cyst. Ackermann et al. (1987 ) suggested that although the paradental cyst may arise from follicular (reduced enamel) epithelium, the histogenesis is quite different and it should not be regarded as a variant of dentigerous cyst. They believed that the dentigerous cyst should be defined as a cyst enclosing the crown of a completely unerupted tooth.

      Despite this, many clinicians and pathologists diagnose collateral lesions associated with partially erupted third molars as ‘inflamed dentigerous cysts’. Fowler and Brannon (1989 ) agreed with Ackermann et al. (1987 ) that a dentigerous cyst is, by definition, associated with an unerupted tooth, but also believed that the paradental cyst is a variant of dentigerous cyst. In this respect, a relationship to the dentigerous cyst may be suggested on the basis of a common origin from epithelium lining the dental follicle, with intraosseous (dentigerous cyst) and extraosseous (paradental cyst) variants associated with totally unerupted and partially erupted teeth, respectively.

      One possible pathogenic mechanism for the paradental cyst is that it represents a developmental dentigerous cyst that has become laterally (and buccally) displaced by the eruption of the associated tooth, with subsequent inflammation. This seems unlikely, however, since the typical radiology of the paradental