Oral Medicine Flashcards

1
Q

What soft tissue infections may occur?

A

Viral
- primary herpes
- herpangina
- hand foot and mouth

Bacterial
- Strep
- staph

Fungal
- candida

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2
Q

What is primary herpetic gingivostomatitis?

Signs and symptoms?

A

Acute disease caused by HSV1 droplets

  • fluid filled vesicles that rupture into ulcers
  • severe gingivitis
  • fever, malaise and headache
  • swollen cervical lymph nodes
  • dehydration most common
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3
Q

What may cause outbursts of primary herpetic gingivostomatitis?

How manage?

A

Light, stress, other systemic conditions

Topical aciclovir cream

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4
Q

What is herpangina?

A

Vesicles in tonsillar region lasting 7-10 days

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5
Q

What is hand foot and mouth?

A

Ulceration on gingiva, tongue and cheeks along with rash on hands and feet

Lasts 7-10 days

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6
Q

Define an oral ulceration

A

Local defect where covering epithelium is destroyed leaving inflamed area of exposed connective tissue

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7
Q

What 10 questions would you ask about an ulcer?

A

Onset

Frequency of ulcers

Number of ulcers

Size of ulcers

Site and size of ulcers

How long they last

Exacerbating dietary factors

Any lesions in other areas

Associated medical issues

Any treatment os far?

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8
Q

What are some main causes for ulceration?

A
  • most common = no underlying cause

Infection - Herpes, hand foot mouth, herpangina

Immune medicated - coeliac or crohns

Trauma

Vitamin deficiency - iron, b12, folate

Neoplastic / haematological - anaemia, leukaemia

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9
Q

What is RAU? What do the ulcers look like?

A

Recurrent apthous ulceration

  • most common cause in children
  • round or ovoid with grey or yellow base

Unclear aetiology

  • mainly hereditary or iron deficiency
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10
Q

Main role of GDP in management of ulceration?

A

Prevent superinfection
- 0.2% corsodyl

Protect healing ulcers
- gengigel topical gel
- gelclair mouthwash

Symptomatic relief
- difflam
- LA spray

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11
Q

What is OFG? Cause? When seen?

A

Oro facial gramulomatosis

Idiopathic or often associated with crohns or allergy

Seen around 11 and mostly in males

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12
Q

Clinical features of OFG?

A

Swelling of soft tissues inc gingiva and lips

Angular chelitis

Lip or tongue fissures

Cobblestone buccal mucosa

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13
Q

What is geographic tongue? Cause? Symptoms and management?

A

Shiny red areas on tongue with loss of filliform papillae
- surrounded by white margins

Cause is idiopathic and is non contagious

Associated with intense discomfort in children, or discomfort with spicy food or juices

Gets better with age

Manage by reducing diet to a bland mix of foods until flare up has disappeared

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14
Q

What may be some causes of some solid swellings?

A

Fibroepithelial polyp

Epulides

Congenital epulis

HPV associated mucosal swellings

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15
Q

What is a fibroepithelial polyp? Where are they often found? and how can it be treated?

A

Firm pink lump either pedunculated or sessile caused from minor trauma such as biting

Often found in cheeks along smile line, or on the lips or tongue

Surgical excision is curative

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16
Q

What is an epulide? What types?

A

Solid swelling of mucosa often found at the interdental region

Swellings due to inflammation where calculus or plaque is present

17
Q

What is congenital epulis?

A

Large lesion of granular cells covered with epithelium

18
Q

What musical swellings can HPV cause? What are their typical signs?

A

Verruca vulgaris and squamous cell papilloma

  • small pedunculated Cauliflower like growths

VV can be solitary or multiple lesions
- often associated with skin warts too

SCP is most usually solitary

19
Q

What may cause a fluid filled swelling?

A
  • mucoceles
  • ranula
  • bohn’s nodules
  • Epstein pearls
20
Q

What is a mucocele? What causes them? When and where typically found?

A

Fluid filled swelling caused by either salivary gland secretions rupturing into adjacent tissue, or by secretions being retained in an expanded duct

Typically found on minor salivary glands in the lower lip in the 2nd decade of life

21
Q

What is a ranula? What is needed for this?

A

Mucocele but in the floor of the mouth

Caused by ducts of the submandibular or sublingual gland most often

Need an MRI or ultrasound to see if it extends into the submental or submandibular space

22
Q

What are bohns nodules? Where are they most commonly found and when?

A

Gingival cysts found on the alveolar ridge in the first 28 days of life (neonates)

They are remnants of the dental lamina filled with keratin and usually disappear in the first few months

23
Q

What are espteins pearls? Where found and when?

A

Small cysts along the palatal mid line

Found again in neonates

Usually disappear in first few weeks

24
Q

If someone has pain, masticatory spasm and limited opening in the jaw, what might they have?

A

Temporomandibular joint dysfunction syndrome

25
Q

What should your examination consist of when suspecting TMJDS?

A

Extra oral feeling of tmj and MOM, check opening of the mouth too (normal 40-50mm)

Check for any intra oral wear or signs of clenching or grinding

26
Q

How may one treat TMJDS?

A

Explain condition

Reduce exacerbating factors
- manage stress
- avoid clenching, grinding or nail biting

Allow over worked muscles to rest by stifling yawns or eating soft diet for a while

Pain management with OTC medication

27
Q

How treat primary herpetic gingivostomatitis

A

Start with bed rest, proper fluid intake to avoid dehydration, eating with proper nutrition and also OTC analgesics / chlorhexadine mouthwash 10ml twice daily

If this doesn’t work then aciclovir

5% cream on lesion every 4 hours, 5 times a day, for up top ten days