General Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 3 reasons to refer to OM

A
  1. Standard primary setting treatment not having an effect on a symptomatic lesion
  2. cannot convince patient that their benign lesion is not cancer
  3. abnormal and unexplained changes to the oral mucosa (clinician threshold changes as career progresses)
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2
Q

when do you refer to a hospital and how?

A

when there is suspected cencer or dysplasia - via the SCI gateway 2 week cancer referal pathway

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3
Q

when to refer white lesions in mouth

A
  1. lesions without cause (lateral border of tonue, floor of mouth, soft palate)
  2. becoming raised and thcikened
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4
Q

When NOT to refer

A
  1. asymptomatic variations of NORMAL mucosa
    - if unsure photograph and compare at next appointment
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5
Q

meaning of neoplasm

A

an abnormal growth of cells (carcinoma)

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6
Q

when to refer for RAS type disease

A
  1. if <12 yo as means large genetic component as not growth causing the issue
  2. if have have been for haematinics blood test, have had 3 months to try revert this deficiency AND…
  3. have prescribed topical and still not helping
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7
Q

what has to be on your differential diagnosis if there is crusting of the lips from healing ulceration

A
  • erythema multiforme
  • as this effects more anteriorly in the mouth even if no skin lesions
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8
Q

what are the best lines to say when unsure of extra information

A
  1. check … guidlines
  2. Consult a specialist
  3. condult patients GP
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9
Q

antibodies looking for in aphthous ucleration

A
  1. anti LA
  2. anti RO
  3. ANA (anti nucliac antibody)
    * ANA NOT WHAT LOOK FOR IN SJOGRENS
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10
Q

difference between Trigeminal neuralgia and painful trigeminal neuropathy and Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias

A
  • PTN = more likely burning / tingling or squeezing pain, widespread down entire branch, more continuous background sensation, more likly sensory deficit
  • TAC = cluster headache or paroxysmal hemicrania (shorter version), very severe, ophthalmic branch most likley, migranous symptoms,
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11
Q

important

A

pemphigoid can look like angina bullosa haemorhagica as can have blood in infiltrate due to being so close to vessels

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