#26098 01-12-2004 05:45 AM | Joined: Jan 2004 Posts: 2 Member | OP Member Joined: Jan 2004 Posts: 2 | Hello My name is Laura, last week my husband noticed some dark patches on the inside of his right cheek, he is 44 and has chewed for many years. All last week he was scared to death that it was cancer, on friday he seen an ENT, who said he thought it was tattooing caused from his fillings. But we asked for a biopsy anyway, which will be preformed tomorrow. Has anyone ever heard of Tattooing from fillings in your teeth???? I am desperate for an answer, I tried to research this on the internet and came up with nothing....I am also very scared !!!
Thanks Laura
Laura
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#26099 01-12-2004 08:41 AM | Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 3,552 Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts) | Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts) Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 3,552 | Hi Laura, I don't know anything about "filling tattooing" but the relationship between tobacco and oral cancer is well understood. He's just playing Russion roulette with it. I hope that this serves as a wake up call to quit a potentially deadly habit, if nothing else.
Gary Allsebrook *********************************** Dx 11/22/02, SCC, 6 x 3 cm Polypoid tumor, rt tonsil, Stage III/IVA, T3N0M0 G1/2 Tx 1/28/03 - 3/19/03, Cisplatin ct x2, IMRT, bilateral, with boost, x35(69.96Gy) ________________________________________________________ "You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes" (James 4:14 NIV)
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#26100 01-12-2004 08:50 AM | Joined: Jan 2004 Posts: 2 Member | OP Member Joined: Jan 2004 Posts: 2 | Yes Gary, as soon as he noticed the black patches on his cheek, he stopped. It scared the hell out of him !!! I think the tattooing thing is B/S. !
Laura
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#26101 01-12-2004 10:41 AM | Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 4,918 Likes: 65 OCF Founder Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts) | OCF Founder Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts) Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 4,918 Likes: 65 | Amalgam tattoos are very common, as a small particulate of the silver filling material becomes embedded in the soft tissues of the mouth and gradually they discolor a sport surrounding the metal particle. This can happen at the time of placement of the filling, appearing later in life, or can come as a filling begins to break down as it ages. I assure you they are not BS. Things that look like amalgam tattoos are usually oral melanomas, a very deadly form of oral cancer but thankfully very rare. (You can read more about these on the facts page.) While the biopsy will give you a definitive answer what you wish to be hoping for right now is an amalgam tattoo. The causes of oral melanomas, the only oral cancer that looks generally like an amalgam tattoo are relatively unknown. They are not directly related to tobacco use such as the squamous cell carcinomas that the bulk of the posters here on the boards have had. While an unlikely source of a melanoma, I agree with Gary that this should be a wake up call to a dangerous lifestyle choice.
Brian, stage 4 oral cancer survivor. OCF Founder and Director. The first responsibility of a leader is to define reality. The last is to say thank you. In between, the leader is a servant. | | |
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