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submandibular mass; submandibular swelling

Etiology: - unilateral - benign neoplasm* - malignancy* - salivary stones & salivary duct stenosis (generally painful) - salivary adenosis secondary to systemic disease* (generally painful) - Sjogren syndrome - HIV1 infection - bilateral - viral infections (munps, CMV, EBV) * in order of frequency; unilateral makes neoplasm/malignancy more likely [1] Radiology: - CT of head & nead - MRI is an option Management: - secretagogues indicated for salivary stones or salivary adenosis - generally after neoplasm/malignancy has been ruled out with CT

General

salivary gland disease mass lesion

References

  1. NEJM Knowledge+ Gastroenterology
  2. Mehanna H, McQueen A, Robinson M, Paleri V. Salivary gland swellings. BMJ. 2012 Oct 23;345:e6794. PMID: 23092898 Review.
  3. Kessler AT, Bhatt AA. Review of the Major and Minor Salivary Glands, Part 2: Neoplasms and Tumor-like Lesions. J Clin Imaging Sci. 2018 Nov 15;8:48. PMID: 30546932 PMCID: PMC6251244 Free PMC article