{Reference Type}: Case Reports {Title}: [Mucous retention cyst of the alveolar bone radiologically mimicking a radicular cyst: A case presentation.] {Author}: von Arx T;Bräutigam K;Banz Y;Bornstein MM; {Journal}: Swiss Dent J {Volume}: 132 {Issue}: 3 {Year}: 03 2022 7 暂无{DOI}: 10.61872/sdj-2022-03-02 {Abstract}: One of the most frequent pathologies of jaw bone is a bacteria-induced inflammation at the apices of teeth with subsequent bone resorption that typically presents as a radiolucency in radiographs. Usually, corresponding clinical and radiographic findings correlate and allow for an accurate diagnosis. However, occasionally an unexpected and completely different diagnosis presents as documented in this case report. In a 55-year-old female patient, a radicular cyst was suspected in her right maxillary bone. The treatment plan included a cystectomy as well as apical surgery of the adjacent and root-canal filled teeth 15 and 16. However, the intraoperative finding absolutely did not fit a radicular cyst but rather a mucous retention cyst, as could be confirmed subsequently by histopathology. The diagnosis of a mucous retention cyst within the jaw bone is extraordinary and as such has never been described before in the literature.