Systemic disease and the mouth Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 main groups when considering Oral manifestations of systemic disease?

A
  • Dental manifestations of systemic disease
  • Mucosal effects of systemic disease
  • Oral effects of treatment of systemic disease
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2
Q

What are the 2 broad categories that dental manifestations of systemic disease occur?

A
  • Disruption to tooth structure formation
  • Disruption to tooth structure content
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3
Q

Is dental manifestations going to be more apparent in children or adults?

A
  • Children
  • Apparent in primary teeth for pre/perinatal issues
  • Apparent in permanent teeth for perinatal/childhood issues
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4
Q

What are some congenital conditions/infections that can cause dental manifestations in children?

A
  • Syphillis
  • TORCH
  • Ectodermal dysplasia
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5
Q

What is TORCH infection?

A
  • Infection of developing fetus or newborn that can occur in utero, during delivery or after birth
  • Stands for toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus, herpes and other agents
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6
Q

What is ectodermal dysplasia?

A
  • Dsiorders that affect skin, sweat glands, hair, teeth and nails
  • Can also cause immune system problems like hearing and vision
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7
Q

What are some illness’ or metabolic disorders that can cause dental manifestations in children?

A
  • Severe childhood illness
  • Cancer txt (the earlier the txt starts the more dental development issues can be seen)
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8
Q

What are some pigmentations from substances in the blood which can cause dental manifestations in children?

A
  • Bilirubin (found in high levels in pt with jaundice can affect the teeth)
  • Tetracycline (administered within antibiotic can then be incorporated iinto tooth substance)
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9
Q

What systemic disease can manifest as this picture?
- Describe what you see

A
  • Ectodermal dysplasia
  • Shows hypodontia and hypoplasia
  • Small cone shaped teeth and missing teeth
  • This pt does not have full ectodermal dysplasia as has hair on upper lip
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10
Q

What is a common finding of pt with ectodermal dysplasia?

A
  • Absence of sweat glands or salivary glands
  • Can cause issue with xerostomia - caries - perio - etc
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11
Q

What systemic infection can cause this manifestation?
- Describe what you see

A
  • Syphilis
  • Show changes to incisors in particular termed Hutchinson’s incisor with a bulbous crown
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12
Q

What systemic disease can cause this dental manifestation?
- Describe what you see

A
  • Perinatal illness
  • Shows chnages to the laying down to dentine and enamel
  • Shows some changes to the calcification of these tissues according to the time at which the illness happened
  • Give away is the Clearly same effect through different teeth
  • Upper incisors formed slightly more than lower incisors but both show the hypoplastic and hypomineralised enamel and dentine
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13
Q

What systemic disease can cause this dental manifestation?
- Describe what you see

A
  • Metabolic disease called Porphyria
  • Produce a change in the amount of hem in the blood and can induce this into the teeth
  • Can see the dark pigmentation in the tooth tissues
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14
Q

What systemic disease can cause this dental manifestation?
- Describe what you see

A
  • Sever jaundice as a child
  • Increase the bilirubin in the blood which manifests into the tooth tissues
  • Leads to yellow green change in dentition
  • This case the jaundice went on for some years as all of the crown is affected with the colouring
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15
Q

What tooth substance pigmentation can cause this dental manifestation?
- Describe what you see

A
  • Tetracycline from drug prescription
  • Produce a linear band
  • Tetracycline are not recommended for children anymore for this problem
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16
Q

What are the oral mucosal effects from systemic disease we need to consider?

A
  • Giant cell granuloma
  • Orofacial granulomatosis
  • Recurrent Aphthous stomatitis
  • Dermatoses
  • Immune deficiency/disease
  • Lichen planus (drug reactions)
17
Q

What is this a picture of?

A
  • Giant cell Lesion
18
Q

What are giant cell lesions?

A
  • Type of noncancerous tumour
  • Can be central or peripheral lesions
  • Most are osteoclast related lesions but some can be due to local irritation producing multinucleated giant cells to remove stubborn pathogen
19
Q

If a giant cell lesion is due to hormonal changes what can this be due to?

A
  • Parathyroid hormone excess
  • Shows active parathyroid gland not being inhibited by normal negative feedback control
20
Q

When can reactive hyperparathyroid occur and what can they cause?

A
  • Can occur due to renal failure or hypocalcaemia
  • Can cause giant cell lesions as a result of excess parathyroid stimulation of osteoclasts
21
Q

What radiographic changes are being seen here and what can it be a result of and why?

A
  • Loss of cortical bone
  • Cortical bone is the densest and has highest calcium content therefore it is preferentially removed when parathyroid hormone is trying to raise the plasma calcium level during Hyperparathyroidism
22
Q

What condition is showing these radiographic changes?

A
  • Hyperparathyroidism
  • Lamina dura often lost around all teeth and along the whole root (don’t mistake for pathology)
23
Q

What hormone is causing this mucosal change?

A
  • Raised ACTH - Addisons or cushings (pituatory adenoma producing Excess ACHT) or small tumour in lung producing ACHT
  • High ACTH produces reactive melanosis of oral muscosa
  • Widespread mucosal change and can happen on the
24
Q
A