Lip Schwannoma—A Rare Presentation in a Pediatric Patient: Case Report and a Literature Review
Cinzia Casu, Mara Pinna, Andrea Butera, Carolina Maiorani, Girolamo Campisi, Clara Gerosa, Antonella Caiazzo, Andrea Scribante, Germano Orrù

TL;DR
A rare case of lip schwannoma in a 17-year-old boy is reported, highlighting the challenges in diagnosing this uncommon tumor in the oral cavity.
Contribution
This case report adds to the limited literature on pediatric oral schwannoma, particularly involving the lip.
Findings
Oral schwannoma is rare, with lip localization being one of the least common sites.
Complete surgical excision is recommended to prevent recurrence.
Histological confirmation using S-100 positivity is essential for diagnosis.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Schwannoma is a rare tumor, typical in young adults, originating from the myelin sheath that surrounds Schwann cells. It can occur in any part of the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS). It develops in the head and neck region in 25–48% of cases, and the eighth pair of cranial nerves (vestibulocochlear nerves) are the most hit (vestibular schwannoma). Oral cavity involvement is exceedingly rare, accounting for about 1–2% of all cases. The most affected oral site is the tongue, especially its anterior third, while localization on the lip is one of the least common sites for the development of this lesion. Case Presentation: A lower lip schwannoma on a 17-year-old boy, present for about 7 years, was documented. Material and Methods: PubMed and Google Scholar were used as research engines; English scientific works published in the last 20 years (2005–2024) regarding oral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurofibromatosis and Schwannoma Cases · Ear and Head Tumors · Soft tissue tumors and treatment
