Oral ulceration Flashcards

1
Q

How to describe an intraoral lesions?

A
  • site
  • size
  • surface
  • consistency
  • mobility
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2
Q

What does sessile mean?

A

sitting within the normal tissue

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3
Q

What does pedunculate mean?

A

attached by a narrow pedicle (fibroepithelial polyp)

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4
Q

In which patients is atrophic glossitis more likely to be seen?

A

Patients with iron deficiency anaemia

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5
Q

What is an ulcer?

A

Pathological disintegration of the surface epithelium

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6
Q

What does trauma cause?

A

Abrasion of surface epithelium, can see erythema and inflammation

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7
Q

What does inflammation cause?

A

Surface epithelium breaks down and gets disintegration of surface epithelium.

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8
Q

How do ulcers heal?

A

Epithelial cells spread to cover and stimulate to proliferate and move across underlying tissue and grow from the edges into the centre to heal.

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9
Q

What aspects of a patients medical history can make them more likely to have ulceration?

A

Anaemia
GI disease
Skin disease
Diet
Infections
Medications (dry mouth, chemotherapy)

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10
Q

What should you check for intraorally that would give an explanation for a presenting ulcer?

A

Sharp teeth/bone
Dry mouth
Denture clasps that are sharp

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11
Q
A
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