Soft tissue masses
Some swellings arise from skin, fat, or deeper soft tissues in the face and neck.
Head and neck swellings are abnormal lumps or enlargements that can occur in the face, jaw, neck, salivary glands, thyroid region, or lymph nodes. While many swellings are caused by infections or benign conditions, some may indicate tumors or cancer and require prompt evaluation.
A head or neck swelling refers to any abnormal mass that develops in the soft tissues, lymph nodes, salivary glands, jaw bones, or skin of the head and neck region. The swelling may appear suddenly due to infection or gradually enlarge over weeks or months. Early assessment is important to determine the underlying cause.
Some swellings arise from skin, fat, or deeper soft tissues in the face and neck.
Reactive, infectious, autoimmune, or cancer-related nodes can present as neck lumps.
Salivary glands, cysts, and jaw tumors may also appear as swelling.
Head and neck swellings can result from infections, salivary gland disorders, enlarged lymph nodes, benign tumors and cysts, or malignant conditions. A detailed evaluation helps distinguish harmless causes from conditions that need urgent treatment.
Dental, tonsil, throat, skin, soft tissue, and lymph node infections can all cause swelling.
Stones, sialadenitis, and benign or malignant salivary gland tumors may present as lumps.
Sebaceous cysts, lipomas, branchial cysts, dermoid cysts, and thyroglossal duct cysts are common benign causes.
Oral cancer, tongue cancer, head and neck cancer, lymphoma, and metastatic neck nodes must be ruled out.
You should consult a specialist if you notice a lump lasting more than two weeks, a swelling that gradually increases in size, pain or tenderness, difficulty swallowing or speaking, persistent mouth ulcers, hoarseness, unexplained weight loss, night sweats, bleeding from the mouth, or swelling associated with tobacco or alcohol use.
Any neck swelling lasting longer than two weeks needs evaluation.
A lump that keeps enlarging may require imaging and tissue testing.
Difficulty swallowing, speaking, or hoarseness can suggest deeper disease.
Weight loss and night sweats can be concerning, especially with a neck mass.
A detailed evaluation may include clinical examination of size, location, consistency, and mobility; imaging studies such as ultrasound, CBCT, CT, or MRI; fine needle aspiration cytology, or FNAC; biopsy when cancer is suspected; and blood tests when needed. The exact workup depends on the suspected cause.
Treatment depends entirely on the diagnosis. Infections and inflammation may be treated medically, while salivary gland tumors, cysts, jaw lesions, benign soft tissue tumors, and cancers may require surgery such as sialendoscopy, parotidectomy, submandibular gland removal, cyst excision, tumor resection, neck dissection, or reconstructive surgery.
Antibiotics, anti-inflammatory medicines, pain relief, hydration, and supportive care can help infection-related swellings.
Procedures may include sialendoscopy, parotidectomy, submandibular gland removal, and cyst excision.
Tumor resection and neck dissection may be needed for benign or malignant lesions.
Maxillofacial reconstructive surgery helps restore form and function after major procedures.
Although many swellings are harmless, warning signs such as a non-healing mouth ulcer, persistent neck lump, tobacco or gutka use, difficulty swallowing, voice changes, unexplained weight loss, or swelling that continues to enlarge increase the likelihood of cancer. Early diagnosis greatly improves treatment outcomes.
Non-healing ulcers and bleeding from the mouth need prompt review.
A persistent or enlarging neck mass can indicate serious disease.
Tobacco, gutka, and alcohol use raise concern for head and neck cancer.
We provide expertise in diagnosing head and neck masses, advanced imaging and diagnostic facilities, specialized salivary gland surgery, oral cancer and head & neck cancer management, minimally invasive surgical techniques, and comprehensive reconstructive services.
We carefully evaluate the cause of swelling before deciding on treatment.
Modern scans and tissue tests support accurate diagnosis.
Salivary gland, cyst, tumor, and cancer procedures are handled with expertise.
Reconstruction helps preserve function and appearance after surgery.
No. Most head and neck swellings are caused by infections or benign conditions. However, any swelling lasting more than two weeks should be evaluated.
Yes. Severe dental infections can spread to surrounding tissues and cause significant swelling.
Surgery may be necessary for cysts, tumors, salivary gland disorders, or cancerous conditions.
An Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon is well-qualified to evaluate and manage many head and neck swellings, especially those related to the mouth, jaws, salivary glands, and facial structures.
Seek prompt evaluation if you have rapidly increasing swelling, difficulty breathing, difficulty swallowing saliva, or severe pain with fever. These symptoms may indicate a medical emergency and need urgent attention.