Purpose: The object of this study was to present a series of myxoma in
children and to evaluate possible differences between young and adult
s patients. Materials and Methods: All tumors of patients under 16 yea
rs of age (10 cases), were separated from the 80 myxomas found in the
Oral Pathology Laboratory, Faculty of Odontology, Buenos Aires Univers
ity, and were analyzed in terms of clinical data, radiographic image,
histopathology, treatment, and evolution, Results: Myxoma in childhood
represented 12.5% of the 80 cases in our series. The mean age was 11.
6 years, Six patients were boys and four were girls. Both jaws were af
fected equally, predominantly in the premolar-molar region. Eighty per
cent of the tumors were larger than 2 cm. Only one case was clinically
diagnosed as myxoma. Radiologically the most frequent image was unilo
cular with cortical expansion and tooth displacement, Histologically s
even cases were diagnosed as myxoma and three as fibromyxoma. Treatmen
t involved surgical resection in most cases. Two patients showed recur
rence within the first year after surgery. Conclusions: The frequency
of myxoma in childhood may be higher than that of other aggressive odo
ntogenic tumors, although some literature refers to this tumor as very
uncommon in children. Clinically this tumor may not always be taken i
nto account in the differential diagnosis of intraosseous radiolucenci
es in young patients, The histologic appearance is similar in young an
d adult patients, but myxoma in children may be larger. It was not pos
sible to correlate the histologic type of myxoma and the age of the pa
tients.