We report a case of mucocele of the lower lip in a 17-year-old female patient. She complained of a painless swelling on her lower lip for the last one month. The patient also gave a history of lip-biting. Upon clinical inspection, a soft, round, dome-shaped bluish lesion with a pearly appearance was identified on the right lower labial mucosa. On palpation, the lesion was mobile and non-adherent to the underlying tissues. An excisional biopsy was performed under local anesthesia, and the excised sample was sent for histopathological evaluation. Histopathology revealed mucus pooling, surrounded by compressed connective tissue stroma and areas of chronic inflammation indicative of a mucocele. The post-excisional review was done after 10 days, and the patient's healing was satisfactory. The patient had no signs of recurrence after two years of follow-up.
Keywords: adolescent; labial mucosa; lip swelling; lower lip; lower lip swelling; minor salivary glands; mucocele; mucous extravasation cyst; mucous extravasation phenomenon; surgery.
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