- Rare benign neoplasm.
- It occurs more often in middle-aged patients.
- Usually in mandible.
- Small lesions may be radiolucent. In advanced stages irregularly sized calcifications may be scattered in the radiolucency.
- It can cause displacement and impaction of teeth.
Calcifying Epithelial Odontogenic Tumor (CEOT)

Features
Differential diagnosis
- Adenomatoid Odontogenic Tumor (AOT) (mixed)
- Calcifying odontogenic cyst (Gorlin cyst)
- Cemento-Ossifying fibroma (2nd stage)