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Clinical Guide to Oral Diseases. Crispian ScullyЧитать онлайн книгу.

Clinical Guide to Oral Diseases - Crispian Scully


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      Comments: Other conditions such as hairy leukoplakia, racial discoloration or that caused by colored foods or metal intake are easily excluded from the black hairy tongue case due to their differences in clinical characteristics such as the color and location, presence of similar or no lesions in the mouth, persistence with scrubbing as well as the patient's history of drug intake or habits. Therefore, in hairy leukoplakia, the lesions are white and usually located on the lateral margins of the tongue, while in racial pigmentation the lesions are located all over the mouth. The dark discoloration caused by colored foods is easily removed with scrubbing, while it remains fixed in metal poisoning and associated with general toxicity symptoms.

      Q2 In which other tissues or organs, apart from the tongue, can chromogenic bacteria cause discoloration?

      1 Bones

      2 Teeth

      3 Sclera

      4 Skin

      5 Heart

       Answers:

      1 No

      2 Chromogenic bacteria in the mouth are responsible for the dark black linear stain that is seen on the cervical part of all teeth (deciduous and permanent) following the contour of gingivae. This stain comes from the deposition of insoluble ferric salts that are produced from the interaction of hydrogen sulfide released from chromogenic bacteria with iron, which is found in the saliva or gingival exudate.

      3 No

      4 No

      5 No

      Q3 Which of the bacteria below is the most predominant in dark teeth stains?

       Porphyromonas gingivalis

       Prevotella melaninogenica

       Actinomyces

       Fusobacterium nucleatum

       Mycobacterium lepromatosis

       Answers:

      1 No

      2 No

      3 Actinomyces species are predominant in saliva of patients with black stains on their teeth.

      4 No

      5 No

      Comments: Other bacteria like Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium nucleatum are implicated in various periodontal diseases while Prevotella melaninogenica and Mycobacterium lepromatosis cause anaerobic infections of the upper respiratory tract and leprosy respectively.

      Case 2.5

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      CO: A 58‐year‐old woman presented with a dark black to blue painless swelling in the vermillion border of her lower lip, close to the right commissure.

      HPC: The lesion had been present for almost 25 years, and remained unchanged. A lip trauma caused a transient increase in the size of this swelling four years ago, but day by day it returned to its previous size.

      PMH: Her medical history was free of any serious diseases, except for varicose veins on her legs which were dealt with by ligation and stripping surgery two years ago. She was a non‐smoker or drinker and spent her free time gardening. She had no other similar lesions in her mouth or other parts of her body.

      Q1 What is the diagnosis?

      1 Hemangioma

      2 Melanoma

      3 Phlebolith

      4 Mucocele

      5 Kaposi's sarcoma

       Answers:

      1 No

      2 No

      3 Phlebolith is the correct answer. This isolated lesion is relatively rare in the mouth of older people and is characterized by a relatively hard swelling, dark black or blue in color and associated with local vascular malformations and blood stasis causing dystrophic calcifications that are responsible for ts hard consistency.

      4 No

      5 No

      Q2 Which is the most common dystrophic calcification, apart from phleboliths, in the head and neck region?

      1 Myositis ossificans

      2 Calcified epidermal cysts

      3 Calcified lymph nodes

      4 Calcified acne

      5 Osteitis deformans

       Answers:

      1 No

      2 No

      3 Calcified lymph nodes are numerous small masses of calcification within the lymph nodes of the head and neck region due to chronic inflammation, infection, or neoplasia.

      4 No

      5 No

      Comments: The other diseases causes dystrophic calcifications in the head and neck region but their calcifications are rare and accompanied with lesions in jaws and other bones (osteitis deformans); the facial muscles (myositis ossificans), in the healing acne vulgaris lesions (calcinosis cutis) and within epidermal cysts.

      Q3 Which is or/are the difference/s between a small phlebolith and salivary gland stone?

      1 LocationSymptomatologyAge of appearanceCompositionRadiological features

      2  Answers:The calculus in the phlebolith is located within a vein while the sialolith is located within salivary gland or its duct respectively.Small phleboliths do not cause severe symptoms apart from esthetic problems, while sialoliths are associated with salivary gland enlargement, topical inflammation and pain.Phleboliths are “vein stones” and are presented in younger patients with vascular malformations, but sialoliths appear in older patients.Phleboliths are calcified thrombus of calcium carbonate and phosphorus within a dilated vessel, while sialoliths consist of a mixture of hydroxyapatite and carbonate‐apatite, centrally, being surrounded by an organic component of glycoproteins, mucopolysaccharides, lipids and cell dendrites.Radiographically, phleboliths


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