Oral Medicine Tutorial 1 Flashcards

1
Q

what are oral lichenoid lesions (OLL)

A

similar lesions to lichen planus but are caused by a known agent (amalgam, ACE inhibitors, betablockers)

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2
Q

what is the difference between OLL and OLP

A

OLP appears bilaterally, reticular pattern of slightly raised white lines, idiopathic
OLL is singular lesions in localised area, unilateral with known cause

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3
Q

what is the pathogenesis of OLP

A

chronic T cell infiltrate with basal cell degeneration - death of basal cells and thickening of epithelial tissue

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4
Q

what are the six subtypes of OLP

A

erosive, atrophic, reticular, bullous, plaque like, pappular

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5
Q

what is the intra-oral manifestations of OLP

A

red or white patches
roughness of lining mucosa
sensitivity to hot or spicy food

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6
Q

what three histopathological signs must be present to diagnose OLP

A

well defined band like zone of cellular infiltrate confined to superficial part of connective tissue
signs of liquefaction in basal cell layer
absence of epithelial dysplasia

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7
Q

what is used in the management of OLP and OLLs

A

remove known triggers
avoid SLS containing toothpaste
beclomethasone inhaler and betamethasone rinse
clobetasol
tacrolimus
prednisolone

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8
Q

what investigations are used for OLP

A

biopsy for histopathological investigation
FBC
haematinics
autoantibody screen if lupus suspected

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9
Q

what is the malignant transformation rate of OLP/OLLs

A

0.2%

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10
Q

what is sjogren’s syndrome

A

chronic autoimmune disorder characterised by salivary and lacrimal gland destruction

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11
Q

when is sjogren’s syndrome primary

A

if not associated with any other diseases

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12
Q

when is sjogrens syndrome secondary

A

if it occurs in association with another autoimmune condition

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13
Q

what are intra-oral manifestations of sjogren’s syndrome

A

oral dryness
dysphagia and dysgeusia
pain and burning sensation
recurrent enlargement of salivary glands

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14
Q

what are the special investigations from the ACR/EULAR used to screen for sjogren’s

A

labial salivary gland biopsy - focus score of more than 1 foci per 4mm squared
antibody positivity - Anti-Ro/ Anti-La
ocular staining score -
schirmers test - less than 5mm of tears in 15 mins
unstimulated salivary flow - less than 0.1ml per minute

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15
Q

what is systemic lupus erythematous (SLE)

A

autoimmune disease with multisystem involvement

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16
Q

what are intra-oral manifestations of lupus

A

ulcers, erosion, pigmentation, cheilitis, honeycomb plaque

17
Q

what are extra oral manifestations of SLE

A

malar/ butterfly rash
photosensitivity
pericarditis

18
Q

when is it only acceptable to test a patient for lupus

A

if they have a positive antinuclear antibody test positive first

19
Q

what are the seven areas a patient with suspected lupus would be investigated in

A

cardiac
haematological
immunological
musculoskeletal
neuropsychiatric
renal
skin/ mucosal

20
Q

how is Sjogrens syndrome and SLE managed

A

hydroxychloroquine used as first line
glucocorticoids (prednisolone) during flare ups
immunosuppressants (methotrexate and azathioprine)
monoclonal antibodies (belimumab)