Images, etiologies, and treatments (random order) Flashcards
What is this clinical presentation?
Geographic tongue/
areata migrans
What is this infectious disease?
Oral Verruca Vulgaris
HPV 2,4,6
Also “finger‐like
projections”
remember it’s contagious
What is this radiographical finding?
Metastatic Carcinoma to Jaw Bones
C. Periapical image of a metastatic lesion of breast carcinoma; note the irregular widening of the periodontal membrane spaces and patchy sclerotic bone reaction, especially around the roots of the molars
Histoplasmosis
is endemic where
who can get infected by it?
How does is spread?
● Endemic in fertile river valleys
‐ Seen in people who spend a lot of time outside; near Ohio and Mississippi rivers
● Bird and bat excrement
● Airborne spores enter lungs through inhalation
● Macrophage ingests fungusàT‐lymphocyte immunity
● Antibodies develop several weeks later
● Macrophages may confine fungus (express disease later)
Sickle Cell Anemia Types and which is resistant to malaria?
- Sickle cell trait ‐ one allele is affected, only 40‐50% of hemoglobin will be abnormal, no significant clinical manifestations
- Sickle cell disease ‐ both alleles affected, close to 100% of hemoglobin is abnormal, significant clinical problems
▪ Abnormal gene confers resistance to malaria, therefore, sickle cell trait is seen most frequently in populations from areas endemic for malaria (Africa, the Mediterranean, and Asia)
Leprosy is also known as ———
Hansen disease
Which systemic disease manifests like this?
Crohn Disease
- Patients can also get angular cheilitis
- Above the Linear ulceration, can see a flap like structure which is the hyperplastic margin
Is this Globulomaxillary Cyst , lateral granuloma or OKC?
~ it is kind of a teardrop or pear shaped size
~Little less well differentiated in this particular instance but again unilocular radiolucency between the roots of two teeth
This one ended up being an OKC
What is this disease?
Simple Bone Cyst
Also known as
1.) Solitary Bone Cyst.
2.) Traumatic Bone Cyst.
3.) Idiopathic Bone Cyst.
4.) Hemorhhagic Bone Cyst.
Remember radiographic feature
tend to Scalop between teeth
Treatment includes surgical curettage- spontaneous healing has been reported.
Infantile
Hemangioma
When do they appear?
Rate of Development
Clinical presentation
Treatment
- When do they appear? They are rarely present at birth, infants are Born with this in place.
- Rate of development: the tumor will demonstrate rapid development that occurs at a faster pace than the infant’s overall growth in the first few weeks of life,
- Treatment: Typically will involute with time, Some cases don’t involute, so need to be removed
- It is a vascular Anomaly
Crohn Disease
Treatment
- Current strategies aim for deep and long‐lasting remission, with the goal of preventing complications, such as surgery, and blocking disease progression
- Immunosuppressant such as cyclosporine
- In more severe cases;
- *high dose corticosteroids and**
- chemotherapeutics to induce a remission
-
Nutritional supplements (iron, folate)
- Because they are unable to absorb nutrients
- If medical means do not keep patient under control► surgical removal of a portion or all of the intestine
- When intestinal symptoms are under control►oral ulcerations resolve
What is the radiographical finding?
“Primordial” Cyst
Assuming histologically it is different from OKC
Cryptococcus can cause what kind of infections?
● Pulmonary infection
● Meningitis ( after it spreads from the lungs to the brain. )
What is “Sulfur granules”
Where it is found?
In which infection?
color?
colonies of bacteria (o Actinomyces israelii
o Actinomyces viscosus)
found in suppuration (pus) which means Suppuration (pus) is dead tissue, bacteria, dead white blood cells, and other products of tissue breakdown..
Sulfur granules found in Actinomycoses
yellow in color
Erythematous
Candidiasis
what are its
Clinical finding?
Subtypes?
● Clinical Findings:
- Red macules or patches
- Can be due to multiple things
● Subtypes:
‐ Atrophic Candidiasis (acute‐feels like mouth has been scalded)
‐ Median Rhomboid Glossitis (asymptomatic)
‐ Denture Stomatitis (asymptomatic)
■ HAS THE SHAPE OF THE DENTURE
‐ Chronic multifocal (asymptomatic)
■ THIS HAS BEEN THERE FOR A LONG TIME
What is the radiographic finding?
Residual Cyst
What is this clinical finding?
Branchial Cleft Cyst
Then you can see it in an older person; this is getting
to be maybe 4-5 centimeters at least in size. He left
his for a little bit longer
If you see Condyloma Acuminatum in a child, what is the next step?
-Since this is a sexually transmitted disease, we need to suspect sexcual child abuse and investigate further!
Monomorphic Adenomas
What is it?
Types?
Treatment?
What is it?
Proliferation of 1 type of cell makes up the tumor.
Types? Includes:
o Canalicular Adenoma
o Basal Cell Adenoma
Treatment for all monomorphic adenomas is surgical excision & diagnosis is done with biopsy
What are the Constant bacterial species found in Necrotizing Periodontal Diseases?
Will we be able to use microbiological testing to form a diagnosis?
o Treponema spp.
o Selenomonas spp.
o Fusobacterium spp.
o Prevotella intermedia
o *Also always present in healthy gingiva ▪ so, No, Microbiological testing is NOT used to form a diagnosis
What is this infectious disease?
Necrotizing Gingivitis (NG)
o No periodontitis features
o SIMILAR APPEARANCE to gonorrhea
▪ Distinguishing characteristic of NG – Fetid Odor
What is this clinical finding?
Sublingual Varices
What is this gross finding?
Grossly image of
Dentigerous Cyst
What is the radiographical finding?
Odontogenic
Keratocyst
OKC
Hemophilia A & dental treatment
▪ Partial thromboplastin time (PTT), prothrombin time (PT), bleeding time (BT) and platelet counts, as well as consultation with physician, should be done prior to any dental treatment
▪ (PT is like INR, Normal INR between 0.8 and 1.2)
▪ Clotting factor replacement therapy (synthetic) given as indicated
▪ Avoid aspirin
HPV vaccine
Newest is Gardsail 9
against many types
for both men and women
▪ 2 doses recommended for boys/girls age 11‐12 and 6mo later
▪ Recommended for everyone <26yo (MAX)
▪ NOT recommended for 26+yo unless risk for new infections (less benefit since most already exposed)
▪ Virus like particles (VLP) of L1 capsid protein present in vaccine
Results of Vaccination ▪ Drops in infections w/ HPV types that cause most HPV cancers + genital warts in
teen girls, young adult women
▪ Among vaccinated women – cervical precancers dropped by 40%
What is the clinical finding?
Gingival Cyst of the
Adult
What is the Prevalence of Oral (HPV)
Overall: 6.9% (CI 6.7‐8.3)
▪ Gender: Men (10.1%) > Women (3.6%) – women clear faster
▪ Age: bimodal distribution – 30‐34yo and 60‐64yo (she says 30‐34 but Dr. Kerr’s
graph shows mid‐20s
▪ High Risk HPV (3.7%) > Low risk HPV (3.1%)
▪ HPV‐16 infection most prevalent (1% or 2.13 million Americans)
▪ Based on NHANES study w/ oral rinse sampling and PCR
How do we treat this?
‐ Repair sharp teeth/restorations
‐ Remove plaque
‐ Optimize lubrication
Ulcer
What is this infectious disease?
Primary Oral TB
tongue ulceration
What is this clinical presentation?
Leukoedema of the buccal mucosa.
Laskaris,
What are two different ways nasopalatine duct cyst arise?
- *A**. It can either be the cyst totally within bone
- *B**. It can actually cause widening of the orifice and causing the soft tissue expansion in this way
What is this infectious disease?
Vulvovaginitis
a type of candidiasis
Which systemic disease shows radiographically like this?
a medical CT scan of a patient with secondary hyperparathyroidism.
We see a lack of cortical bone – no normal cortical bone. Inside the skull
we have a granular appearance, with radiolucent and radiopaque dots, we call this a salt and pepper dots.
This is why we call this a salt and pepper appearance, there is no normal cortical bone.
( systemic endocrine diseases)
What is this clinical finding?
PLEOMORPHIC ADENOMA
(MIXED TUMOR)
How is Syphilis Treated?
o Single dose of parenteral long‐ acting benzathine penicillin G (primary, secondary, early latent)
o Intramuscular penicillin weekly for three weeks (late latent and tertiary
what are the charcterstics of
HUMAN PAPILLOMA VIRUS (HPV)
?
§Small, non-enveloped icosahedral DNA virus that infects
skin or mucosal cells of humans.
§Circular DNA
§198 types established
§High and low risk types
‐ HIGH risk = CANCER
‐ LOW risk = WARTS
What is the clinical finding?
Gingival Cyst of the
Adult
Sialolithiasis
Definition
Treatment
Definition: lith = stone ;; sialolith: a salivary gland stone
Treatment: promote passage of stone (massage, sialogogues, increase fluid intake) or surgical removal
An Oral Manifestaion of which systemic disease?
Hyperparathyroidism
in young children
Simple Bone Cyst
Treatment
- exploration and curettage of space to create bleeding. Clot will organize and allow bone repair
- Recurrence is rare
What is this clinical finding?
Mucocele
What is this infectious disease?
Cat‐Scratch
Disease
What is this clinical presentation?
Sickle Cell Anemia
Can see prominent trabeculae left, looks like steps on a ladder
Dermoid Cyst
a dome shaped
swellingin the floor of the
mouth.
If these were left long
enough, they could cause issues
with swallowing
What is Thalassemia?
▪ A group of disorders of hemoglobin synthesis characterized by
decreased synthesis of either the alpha‐globin or beta‐globin
chains of the hemoglobin molecule
Patients get a microcytic, hypochromic anemia
▪ People with the abnormal gene have a resistance to malaria
▪ People who have the trait rather than the disease are more likely
to live and not die from malaria and spread that gene to their
children
▪ Severity depends on the specific genetic alteration and whether it
is homozygous (severe) or heterozygous (no clinical sign to mild
manifestations)
What is the histological finding?
Lateral Periodontal Cyst
Which systemic disease shows radiographically like this?
we have 2 Pas of patients
with pseudohypoparathyroidism.
- hypoplasia of enamel, tooth material
- hypoplastic tooth bud ( hypoplastic means arrested development)
- delayed eruption,
- external root resorption.
What is this radiographic finding?
Eosinophilic granuloma
What is this clinical finding?
Palatine Torus/Torus Palatinus
What is this clinical finding?
Parotid Papillia (Stenson duct)
Osler-Weber-Rendu
Syndrome
AKA
What is it ?
Type of Herditary and Etiology
What can it cause?
AKA
• Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia
What is it ?
• disorder of development of the vasculature characterized by telangiectases and arteriovenous malformations in specific locations.
Type of Herditary and Etiology
•Autosomal dominant with mutations i_n at least five gene_s but mutations in two genes (ENG and ACVRL1/ALK1) cause approximately 85% of cases.
What can it cause?
• Can cause hemorrhage
Measles
Which viruse causes it?
How does it spread?
Symptoms?
Clinical charcterstics?
location?
▪ Paramyxovirus
▪ Spread through respiratory droplets
▪ Symptoms: runny nose, red/watery eyes, cough, fever, rash, desquamation of skin
▪ *Characterized by Koplik’s spots
‐ Pathognomonic for measles
‐ Discrete, bluish white punctate mucosal
macules
‐ Surrounded by rim of erythema
‐ Represent foci of epithelial necrosis
‐ Often precedes skin manifestations
▪ Most common location for Koplok’s spots:
Buccal mucosa
‐ Lesions may resemble “grains of salt sprinkled
on erythematous background”
What is the Treatment of Necrotizing Periodontal Diseases?
o Removal of bacteria (scaling)
o Chlorhexidine rinse
o Antibiotics (fever or signs of systemic illness)
▪ Metronidazole ▪ Penicillin
o Oral hygiene instruction
o Supportive therapy
▪ Rest ▪ Fluids ▪ Soft nutritious diet
o Predisposing (Immunosuppressive)factors
▪ Smoking
▪ HIV?
What is this trabecular pattern of the FD?
Cotton wool
appearance
Irregullary shaped and outlined radiopacities blending in with adjacent bone
What is this infectious disease?
Primary Oral TB
Oral Primary TB clinical manifestation is very rare
TB is directly in the epithelial cells.
Person coughs ⇒ organism enters broken skin somewhere in the
oral mucosa ⇒directly causing TB in the mouth
-this person would NOT have any issues in their lungs
-primary TB = infection went directly into their mucosa from another person
Which ares alpha thalassemia is common?
Areas with a lot of malaria
What is this clinical finding?
neurofibroma
What is this clinical presentation?
Non‐Hodgkins Lymphoma (NHL)
o Typically presents with painless lymphadenopathy
(often unilateral)
▪ up to 40% are extranodal
▪ 5‐10% arise in Waldeyer’s ring
▪ Inflamatory or reactive enlarged lymph nodes tend to be
- *soft, tender, and movable**
- *▪** Lymph nodes associated with malignancy tend to be
- *hard/firm, fixed, and non‐tender**
Lateral Periodontal Cyst represents the intrabony counterpart of which cyst?
gingival cyst of the adult?
What is this clinical finding?
Epulis Fissuratum
What is this infectious disease?
Oral candidiasis
a type of candidiasis
What is this clinical presentation?
Multiple Myloma
Punched out translucency in crest
What is this clinical presentation?
Beta‐thalassemia
▪ Two defective genes – thalassemia major (Cooley’s anemia,
Mediterranean fever)
Hyperplasia of maxilla, body is trying to make more rbc so bone
marrow enlarges to support space of those red blood cells but rbc
are abnormal so spleen keeps destroying them
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
Amyloidosis
Amyloid deposition on the tongue is amyloid, you have papule and nodule like area, can see the crenation of the tooth
After the primary infection the HHV‐3/VZV stays in ————
Sensory ganglia (dorsal root ganglia)
What is this clinical presentation?
Proliferative Verrucous Leukoplakia
Location
○ Gingiva (Frequent)
○ Buccal Mucosa
○ Palatal Mucosa
What is Non‐Tuberculosis
Mycobacterial
Infection
Scrofula
Thalassemia
What is it?
What causes it?
What is it?
- Defect in hemoglobin synthesis
What causes it?
- RBC with reduced hemoglobin content and short life span
Which systemic disease has these oral manifestations?
Amyloidosis
▪ different color compared to normal tongue with amyloid
What is this clinical finding?
Frenal tag
What is this clinical finding?
Lipoma
Usually very orange looking lesion in site where there’s adipose tissue
Very obvious, nothing as orange as lipoma
Gonorrhea can have coinfection
with what other infectious bacteria?
Chlamydia trachomatis
What is the Most common type of skin cancer?
Basal Cell Carcinoma
(BCC)
What is this radiographic finding?
Aneurysmal Bone Cyst
you can see that there is kind of a
multilocular radiolucency in this particular area
What is this infectious disease?
Actinomycoses
it’s an external Sinus
What is this clinical presentation?
Leukemia
Acute and chronic myelo‐monocytic leukemia are the most likely
types of leukemia to exhibit oral manifestations
o Generalized gingival hypertrophy
May create a tumor‐like mass in soft tissue
o granulocytic sarcoma/chloroma (clinically looks green)
▪ mass infiltrate into soft tissue
Oral lichen planus
Treatment:
- Incisional biopsy on non-keratinized, non-ulcerated mucosa
○ Asymptomatic → no tx
○ Symptomatic → 0.5mg/ml Dexamethasone Elixir.
What is this clinical finding?
Canalicular Adenoma
What is this clinical finding?
Cystic Hygroma
a type of Lymphangioma
What is this clinical finding?
Unencapsulated
Lymphoid
Aggregates
Post-tonsillectomy
Can even develop these on area of tonsils.
(left pic) Red/salmon is a lymphoid aggregate (unencapsulated lymphoid tissue). This is someone
who had a tonsillectomy , and you can see these
lymphoid aggregates on posterior pharyngeal wall (salmon color).They move around the area.
(right pic) It grew back even in post-tonsillectomy patients.
Hereditary
Hypophosphatemia
Histology
Enlarged pulp horns
o Can extend up to DEJ
Abnormal globular dentin
o Dentin may exhibit clefting
Enamel clefts
Bacteria noted in enamel, dentin and pulp
o Pulpal involvement leads to necrosis and development of the periapical pathology
What is this infectious disease?
Coccidioidomycosis
Hyperthyroidism
Treatment
- Treatment includes:
- Surgery – complete or partial removal of thyroid gland
-
Medications
- Propylthiouracil and methimazole block normal use of iodine by thyroid gland
- Radioactive iodine 131I
- Treatment often results in hypothyroidism
Periapical Cyst
treatment
- endodontic therapy or extraction of involved teeth
- larger lesions may require biopsy along with endodontic therapy
- lesions which fail to resolve should be biopsied
- follow-up at 1-2 years
What is this gross finding?
Aneurysmal Bone Cyst
✎ It looks like a blood soaked sponge
✎ There’s these open sinusoidal spaces and then fibrous connective tissue surrounding them.
✎The sinusoidal spaces can vary in size; some of them are fairly small and others are large
Dimorphism
of
Candida
Two forms?
SPORES‐ when they are in this form, they do NOT invade
HYPHAE‐ when they begin their invasion
What is this disease?
Focal Osteoporotic
Marrow Defect
A large marrow defect that may mimic a
cystic/neoplastic radiolucency in the jaw.
common incidental finding
a variation of normal anatomy within trabecular bone.
What is this infectious disease?
Secondary Syphilis ( Rash)
here we see muscus patches (right) and Condylomata lata (left)
‐ Disseminated lesions are discovered 4 ‐ 10 weeks after initial infection
‐ Resolve in 3‐12 weeks
‐ Diffuse maculopapular (flat, raised) rash
o May involve oral cavity ‐ Mucous patches
o Most common on tongue and lip
‐ Condylomata lata
o Resembles viral papillomas
‐ Systemic symptoms
What is this clinical presentation?
Cyclic Neutropenia
Oral ulcerations on any mucosal surface exposed to minor trauma & can mimic recurrent aphthous ulcerations without the
erythematous halo that is so typical of aphthous
▪ Gingiva is most severely affected with periodontal bone loss and tooth mobility
This is a before and after of which systemic disease?
Pernicious Anemia
denuded tongue and then the papillae is back again after the treatment. You have to get injections for the rest of your life
Nevoid Basal Cell Carcinoma
Syndrome
(Gorlin syndrome)
_modes of inheritanc_e
Autosomal dominant inheritance
What is this radiologic finding
mature Periapical COD
You can have these lesions in endentulous areas as well.
So this is is an endeulous area, but if there was a tooth here, this would be in the
periapicel region or near it with mixed radiolucent/radiopaque entity the differential
diagonsis of this area could include Periapical COD.
What are the FREQUENCY OF SALIVARY
GLAND TUMORS BY
LOCATION
Lower lip
o Mucocele
o Mucoepidermoid Ca
o Pleomorphic Adenoma
Unicystic Ameloblastoma
Treatment
- Treatment is typically enucleation and curettage
- Reports of lower rate of recurrence (10‐20%) than conventional ameloblastoma (50‐90%) with similar treatment
- Some recommend decompression prior to surgery
- Use of Carnoy’s solution after enucleation- resulted in a recurrence rate lower
Oral Lichenoid Drug
Reaction
Etiology
- Lichenoid reactions may develop after exposure to a medication for periods of > 1 year
- May develop very slowly after the problem is initiated so it can be very challenging to connect the dots
Many different medications that can lead to lichenoid reactions
- Beta blockers, ACE inhibitors, Rituxumab etc…
- A number of new targeted agents “mabs” and “nibs” can cause lichenoid reactions
- In cancer centers, this has become quite a problem because they are taking disease‐modifying drugs
Vitamin C
Deficiency
Known as
scurvy
What are the Stages of recurrent Hsv-1?
Prodrome►papules►vesicles►ulcer►crust►heals►no scar
What is this clinical finding?
Behcet’s Disease
‐ Recalcitrant oral ulcers associated with Behcet’s Disease
‐ Later developed genital ulcers and other complications
‐ Image:
o Sores in the labial mucosa have classic aphthae appearance
o Other ulcers are major aphthae:
▪ Larger
▪ Irregular borders
▪ Intense proliferative erythema
What is this clinical presentation?
o hematoma
because of THROMBOCYTOPENIA or Trauma
What is this radiologic finding
A very mature Periapical COD
( purple arrow)
Well‐defined radiopacity in the periapical region.
Sometimes you may or may not be able to differentiate a very thin radiolucent line as in
this case.
you might include ddx of other lesions which might present with
radiopacity in the preapical region
There are certain tests you can do clinically to differentiate too.
or do clinical tests
What is the soft tissue counterpart of the lateral periodontal cyst ?
Gingival Cyst of the Adult
What is this radiologic finding
Florid COD
Axial section of the mandible.
- Notice mixed radiolucent/radiopaque entity on the patient right side. And on the left the area is more radiopaque centrally and has a thin radioluceny around it.
- The arrows indicate well‐defined radiopacities immedietly surrounded by radiolucent rims.
- Note that the radiolucent rim on the left side is thin when compared to the lesion on the right. This likely means that the lesion on the left is more mature ( more time has passed for the entity to produce more woven bone).
What is this clinical finding?
Capillary
Malformation (Low
flow)
What is Aspergillosis and what causes it?
- Saprobic (in an environment rich of oxygen)
- it caused by Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus fumigatus
What is these clinical findings? (what is the name of the syndrome or complex?)
Cowden Syndrome
Very rare!
pt with Osteopetrosis
- Generalized increase in bone density, increased trabeculation, loss of large bone marrow spaces.
- These patients are more prone to osteomyelitis because they are Hypovascular.
- We have to be careful in extractions because they don’t have the same vascularity as other healthy patients have.
- We see an onion skin appearance by the white arrow.
What is the Treatment Recurrent HSV-1?
❏ Depends on severity/frequency
❏ Preventive/suppressive vs episodic/abortive strategies
Two types of treatment:
Preventive/Suppressive: taking antivirals everyday to prevent an outbreak
Episodic: taking antivirals here and there to abort the process; episodic: abortive.
❏ Drugs used:
❏ Antiviral agents
❏ Antiviral‐steroid combination agents
❏ Avoid precipitating factors, like use sunscreens – avoid any triggers
Infantile
Hemangioma
(“strawberry” hemangioma).
Infant with two red, nodular masses on
the posterior scalp and neck
Neville Cr
Paracoccidio Mycosis is seen in the soil around ——- (name of an animal)
nine‐ringed armadillos
What is this clinical presentation?
pts takes allopurinol
Oral Lichenoid Drug
Reaction
What is this
Hemophilia ?
What are its types
Bleeding disorders associated with a genetic deficiency of any
one of the clotting factors
o Hemophilia A (classic type, most common type )
▪ Factor VIII deficiency
▪ X‐linked recessive
▪ Abnormal PTT
o Hemophilia B (Christmas disease)
▪ Factor IX deficiency,
▪ X‐linked recessive, Abnormal PTT
o Von Willebrand’s disease
▪ Abnormal von Willebrand’s factor, abnormal
platelets
▪ Autosomal dominant
▪ Abnormal BT, abnormal PTT
What is the radiographic finding?
dentigerous cyst
What is this clinical finding?
Fordyce Granules
What are the manifestation of Brown tumor in Hyperparathyroidism
- uni‐ or multilocular Radiolucency (pelvis, ribs, mandible)
- seen with persistent disease
- histology of giant cell lesion (like CGCG)
What is most common type of developmental odontogenic cysts?
20% of all epithelial lined cysts of the jaw
Dentigerous Cyst
What is this clinical presentation?
Proliferative Verrucous Leukoplakia
Patient with proliferative verrucous leukoplakia but manifesting more as
an erythroplakia in multiple sites than a leukoplakia
Proliferative verrucous leukoplakia has very high risk (49.5% in malignant transformation)
almost 10% risk for malignant transformation every year
Which systemic disease manfiest like this?
Addison’s Disease
What are the FREQUENCY OF SALIVARY
GLAND TUMORS BY
LOCATION
Palate
o Pleomorphic adenoma
o Adenoid cystic ca
o Mucoepidermoid ca
o PLGA
o Monomorphic adenoma
Which systemic disease mainfest radiographically like this?
On a sickle cell anemia patient, you see:
- loss of this cortical bone area
- the hair-on-end appearance on the skull
Erythroplakia
Malignant transformation
Erythroplakia is a high risk for malignant transformation. So, if you
encounter an erythroplakia, it’s probably already a cancer or it’s fast‐tracking
towards a cancer
What is this clinical finding?
Granular Cell Tumor
What is the Differential diagnosis of gingival enlargement
Acute Myelogenous Leukemia (AML)
Wegener’s Granulomatosis
Kaposi Sarcoma
Plasma Cell Gingivitis
Generalized gingival enlargement – all different cases and diseases
Steps in Managing RAS patient
‐ History of RAS
‐ Medical History
o Medications
o Review of Systems
‐ Social History
‐ Dental History
‐ Diet/Nutritional History
‐ Physical Examination
‐ LaboratoryTests
HPV multiple lesions
Topical Therapy
▪ Podophyllin resin
▪ Imiquimod (extra‐oral use only)
▪ Cidofovir
▪ Interferon
What is this radiographic & clinical findings?
Periapical cyst
shows inflammation at site
abscess developed fistula tract thru
soft tissue. Pt will have pain until
pressure is released
Peripheral Ossifying or Cementifying Fibroma
What is it?
Clinical appearance
Derived from
Age
Sex
Reccurance rate
Treatment
- a reactive benign soft tissue lesion
- Clinical appearance: Well-demarcated, sessile or pedunculated lesion that appears to originate from the gingival interdental papilla
- Derived from: cells of the periodontal ligament
- Age: children and young adults
- Sex: females more than males
- Recurrence rate – about 16%
- Treatment: Surgical excision
What are the causes of secondary Tuberculosis?
- Immunosuppressive medications
- Diabetes
- Old age
- Crowded living conditions
- AIDS
Nicotine Stomatitis
Treatment
Smoking Cessation.
- Nicotine stomatitis is completely reversible, even when it has been present for many decades.
- The palate usually returns to normal within 1 to 2 weeks of smoking cessation.
How to differentiate Pyogenic Granuloma from the other 2Ps ?
(Peripheral ossifying or cementifying fibroma & Peripheral giant cell granuloma)
- They often occur in the gingival, but can occur in multiple areas
- that’s the one thing that distinguishes this from the other 2 P’s: pyogenic granuloma can occur on ANY oral site, most commonly on the gingival tissues
What is this clinical presentation?
Pseudomembranous candidiasis
on the palate.
usually caused by Candida albicans
Predisposing factors are local
(poor oral hygiene, xerostomia, mucosal
damage, dentures, antibiotic mouthwashes)
What is this radiographic finding?
Complex Odontoma
- 2‐2.5cm mass overlaying the molar.
- radiolucent rim/halo that is mixed, mostly radiopaque
How is Paracoccidioidomycosis treated?
● Trimethoprim/ sulfamethoxazole (mild‐moderate)
● IV Amphotericin B (severe disease)
What is this clinical presentation?
Cyclic Neutropenia
▪ Oral ulcerations on any mucosal surface exposed to minor trauma (L,T, BM and oropharynx) last 5‐7 days
▪ Depending on surface involved, can mimic recurrent aphthous
ulcerations
o Usually do not see erythematous halo that is so typical of
aphthous
▪ Gingiva is most severely affected with periodontal bone loss and tooth mobility
What is this infectious disease?
Condyloma Acuminatum
(Venereal Wart)
HPV 6,11 – can be
cancerous
Genital warts
“short, blunt, clusters”
Characteristic clustering of multiple lesions
Osteoporotic Bone Marrow Defect
Treatment
■ Must biopsy to make a definitive diagnosis
■ No further treatment is then necessary
~ You don’t have to remove it; you can just leave it as it is
What is this radiographic finding?
Calcifying Epithelial Odontogenic Tumor(CEOT)
- Multilocular radiolucency with calcifications.
- an expansion up to PMs and back to 2nd molar
- as well as bowing of mandible.
What is this disease?
Paget’s disease stages
Early Linear lines: The bone is being resorbed in a very distinct
pattern > linear patterns of trabeculation
Middle -MAY see the “cotton wool” appearance (but this is more
pronounced in the third stage)
-the trabecular pattern may or may not be slightly affected
Late - There is MORE bone deposition -the “cotton wool” appearance
is very very clear in this stage! Also-hypercementosis and spacing of teeth.
Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia (MEN) Syndrome
What is it?
Inhertiance type?
Which type is associated with multiple mucosal neruoma?
What other presentations?
Increase risk of which cancer?
What is it?
Group of rare conditions
Inhertiance type?
Autosomal dominant
Which type is associated with multiple mucosal neruoma?
Type 2B
Increase risk of which cancer?
• Increased risk for medullary thyroid cancer (prophylactic thyroidectomy)
Common board questions
What is this infectious disease?
Gonorrhea
looks like necrotizing gingivitis (NG) but fetor oris not present
Who’s the typical group that will get primary herpetic gingivostomatitis?
Children and young patients
What is this clinical finding?
Inflammatory Gingival Enlargement
Example of someone with true hyperplastic gingivitis
Maybe related to very poor plaque control
In this case, either porcelain or porcelain fused to metal full coverage restorations that have very
bulky margins, and that may play a role for food to pick up
What is this clinical finding?
Carcinoma Ex Pleomorphic
Adenoma
What is this clinical finding?
Peripheral Ossifying or Cementifying Fibroma
Lesion in the image is pedunculated – put a periodontal probe on normal gingiva and glide along underneath it, there’s a stalk
Agranulocytosis
Symptoms
Treatment
Symptoms
- ▪ Initial symptoms include non‐specific symptoms of infection malaise, sore throat, swelling, fever, chills, etc.
- Oral findings include multiple ragged ulcerations of the oral mucosa, o can mimic recurrent aphthous but no erythematous halo, Gingiva is a common site & can resemble NUG
Treatment
- Remove offending drug, numbers should replenish in 10‐14 days
- Agranulocytosis secondary to cancer therapy ‐ meticulous oral hygiene, chlorhexidine rinse (non alcohol type) , etc.
What are these clinical findings?
Rhabdomyosarcoma
In this case, hasn’t broken through epithelium
They don’t all break through
What is this clinical finding?
Chronic Hyperplastic Pulpitis (pulp polyp)
What is this radiographic finding?
Stafne Bone Cyst
Less common location
Check if the teeth were vital with vitality test
Get a CBCT in that area
to see what was going on first and then once you saw
the CBCT you’d be able to make the diagnosis.
What is differential diagnosis for florid COD?
FCOD
- Paget’s disease ( t generalized areas)
- Osteomyelitis ( localized area because we have mixed radioluecent/radiopaque areas)
What is this clinical presentation?
Pemphigus Vulgaris.
Multiple erosions of the left
buccal mucosa and soft palate.
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
Hypothyroidism
Macroglossia and crenation (scalloping)
of the lateral tongue
What is differential diagnosis for Periapical COD?
PCOD
Florid COD
Rarefying osteitis (radiolucent lesions) ( it would differentiate in the more early stages of the COD ( the radiolucent stage)
Condensing osteitis (considered in the differential when the lesion is more mature and more radiopaque lesions)
Cementoblastoma ( benign neoplasm of the cementum so we
should be able to see certain features that reflect benign neoplastic lesions )
Dense bone islands ( a common differential when considering COD)
MMP & PV BIOPSY
take two different sites
○ For H&E, still must be perilesional
○ If you get only ulcer just because the clinician thinks
○ that is the pathology → there is no epithelium!
○ The sample is useless and no diagnosis can be made
What is this clinical presentation?
Erythroplakia
of the buccal mucosa
Well-demarcated erythematous patch or plaque with soft velvety texture
Which systemic disease shows radiographically like this?
Acromegaly (Hyperpituitarism)
- enlargement of the mandibular bone with a high degree of enlargement
- a class III appearance
- enlargement of sella tursica because of the pituitary gland enlargement
What is this radiographic finding?
Nasopalatine Duct Cyst
✎This person is edentulous
✎ an inverted pear shape
✎The nasal spine is superimposed
on your radiolucency ► a heart shape
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
Amyloidosis
orange, red, yellow tinge
What is this clinical presentation?
Secondary
Polycythemia
Oral manifestation
▪ Oral mucosa appears deep red
▪ Glossitis
▪ Gingiva appears edematous and bleeds easily
▪ Consequent “crowding out” of WBCs and platelets may result in
other manifestations
HPV Genome
Organization
▪ LCR: long control region
▪ P97: promoter protein
▪ E1‐E7: early region genes
▪ L1,L2: late region genes
Carcinoma Ex Pleomorphic
Adenoma
What is it?
Growth pattern
Treatment?
Prognosis
What is it? (benign tumors that have underwent malignant transformation‐ takes a lot time, 15 to 20 years)
Growth patterns: Mass present for many years with recent rapid growth with associated pain or ulceration
Treatment: Best treated by wide excision, with local node dissection and radiation
Prognosis: guarded, with 50% local recurrence or metastases and dying Prognosis is case to case scenario, may transform to high grade tumor
What are the Predisposing Factors of NOMA?
‐ Previous necrotizing periodontal disease Poverty
‐ Malnutrition or dehydration
‐ Poor oral hygiene
‐ Poor sanitation
‐ Unsafe drinking water
‐ Proximity to unkempt livestock
‐ Recent illness Malignancy
‐ Immunodeficiency disorder, including AIDS
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
Amyloidosis
macroglossia
What is this Radiographical finding?
Sialolithiasis
What is this clinical finding?
Chondrosarcoma
- Alveolar process and floor of mouth affected
- Limitations of movement of the tongue
What is this radiographic finding?
Nasopalatine Duct Cyst
✎Between the roots of the two teeth, a well circumscribed
radiolucency, not showing any changes to the adjacent structures
✎could be an enlargement of the incisive canal due to variation in size ~ early lesions can be hard to diagnose
✎the treatment in such cases: a follow up with another radiograph in six months to see if there’s been any change in size
✎ No surgical intervention until you see the cyst expanding
Case
16yo female
Describe the lesion and what is the diagnosis?
▪Left mandible, multilocular radiolucency associated with impacted tooth
▪ It’s well circumscribed, edge may be a little bit sclerotic or corticated
▪ It has displaced an impacted tooth down towards the inferior
aspect of the mandible
▪ Appears to be expanding the cortex of the mandible in areas
▪ There’s blunt resorption of the teeth adjacent (PMs and molar)
Ameloblastoma
Topical Imiquimod
▪ Induces cytokines + chemokines w/ resutlant anti‐virl (HPV) effects
Not FDA approved for oral warts
Which unusal gene expression causes growth and expansion of OKC ?
- Expresses Ki‐67 (high rate of cell proliferation)
- O_verexpression of Bcl‐2_ (antipoptotic protein)
- Overexpression of MMP’s 2 and 9 (thought to allow growth into connective tissue)
-
Mutation of PTCH, a tumor suppressor gene
- when PTCH is non‐functional → cell proliferation
What is this clinical presentation?
Plasma cell gingivitis
▪ Allergen causes mass infiltrate into gingival
▪ Benign
▪ Diet log to identify allergen, allergy testing
Which regions can Blastomycosis happen?
● Eastern half of US which extends farther north
● Seen in the wild
Branchial Cleft Cyst
Treatment
surgical excision, recurrence is rare
Oral Verruca Vulgaris
What is it?
Contagious?
Apperance ?
▪ HPV 2, and others (1,4,6,7,11,26,27,29,41,57,65,75‐77)
▪ Benign, HPV‐induced focal hyperplasia of stratified squamous epithelium
▪ Contagious – transmitted by direct contact
▪ Soft, painless, usually pedunculated, exophytic lesions w/ numerous fingerlike projections (similar to squamous papilloma)
‐ How to tell the difference? Under microscope
What is this radiographical finding?
- more punched out radiolucency in iliac crest in the image
- Bone marrow biopsy usually done in this area since it’s frequently involved
multiple Myeloma
MM
Median Rhomboid Glossitis
Treatment
No treatment is required.
What is this Radigraphical finding?
Fibrous Dysplasia in
the left of the
maxillae.
Always compare both side left and right
- We see granular/glass appearance of the bone ( blue arrow) and compare it to the contralateral maxillae. The trabucular pattern has changed signficantly.
- Also compare the maxillary sinus space. The left maxillary sinus appears radiopaque.
- That is because the maxillae has been enlarged to the point where it is pushing the floor of the maxillary sinus superiorly and reducing the total volume of the sinus.
- The purple arrows indcate the displaced floor of the maxillary sinus.
What are the two types of Coccidiomycosis ?
- Coccidioides immitis
- Coccidioides posadasii
What is the Mode of infection of HHV?
Primary infection → Latency → Reactivationn → Recurrent infection
What is this infectious disease?
Oral Molluscum
Contagiosum
multiple pink, dome‐shaped, smooth‐surfaced or umbilicated (like belly‐button) papules ‐ with caseous plug
What is this radiographic finding?
Periapical Cysts
►Would need to test both teeth for vitality.
What is the treatment of Leukemia?
-
Treatment depends on specific type of leukemia, but includes multi‐agent chemotherapy (often an initial high dose induction and then a lower maintenance dose)
- And for lymphoma
- Bone marrow transplant has been used with limited success
What is this clinical finding?
Osteosarcoma
▪ Swelling on left side of face
▪ Difficult opening
What is this clinical presentation?
Polymorphous
Adenocarcinoma
What is the mode of pathogenesis of Coccidiomycosis?
Dimorphic organism (spores and hyphae)
What is this radiographical finding?
Metastatic Carcinoma to Jaw Bones
B. Occlusal image of prostate lesions causing sclerosis and spiculated periosteal reaction (arrows)
What is this clinical presentation?
Mucous membrane pemphigoid
SEVERE/HIGH RISK FORMS OF MMP
▪ Ocular
▪ Esophageal
can
result in functional
blindness
Rx Topical
Treatments:
Cautery
‐ Debacterol (sulfonated phenolics; sulfuric acid solution)
o Chemical cautery
o Label: one time application for 5‐10 seconds
‐ NOT recommended to patients with frequent outbreaks
Ameloblastoma
Etiology
▪ Over expression of Bcl‐2 (anti‐apoptotic protein)
▪ Expression of fibroblast growth factor (FGF)
▪ Over expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs 9 and 20) – like in OKC, allowing tumor to grow into surrounding area
▪ Surprisingly, no significant increase in Ki‐67 expression (cell
proliferation marker) – ameloblastomas do NOT turn over rapidly
What is this infectious disease?
Herpes Zoster/
Shingles
- It is affecting the intraoral region
- and the maxillary branch.
- Picture on the far right looks like recurrent HSV (cluster of coalescing ulcers)
- Looking at the picture on the left you can determine it is NOT a recurrent intraoral herpes because we have vesicles that opened up and crusted over on the skin.
VZV histopathology is the same as HSV.
VZV remains latent in the
dorsal root ganglion
travels down the sensory nerves to skin upon reactivation.
❏ The reactivation presents as a painful rash in one or two adjacent
dermatomes that does not cross the midline.
❏ The rash is maculopapular and develops into vesicles.
❏ One complication of zoster is post‐herpetic neuralgia: pain that
persists in the area where the rash once was present.
Which disease has Stary sky pattern histopathology?
Burkitt
Lymphoma
caused by EBV
What is this clinical presentation?
Speckled leukoplakia.
Non-homogenous leukoplakia
What is this infectious disease
Acute lymphonodular pharyngitis
Caused by
Coxsackie
Virus
Affects children
Nodules on the soft palate.
-distinctive, raised, micronodular lesions occur primarily in the pharynx and related structures and regressed without ulceration.
What are the Differential Diagnoses: of Cat Scratch Disease ?
‐
o Swellings in the lymph node
o Unilateral swellings of the neck
“Secondary TB” reactivation
- Leads to disseminated TB (miliary TB)
- True, active TB
What is this infectious diease?
SQUAMOUS PAPILLOMA
Benign Oral Low Risk HPV
Lesion
HPV 6+11
“finger‐like projections
What is this radiographic finding?
Stafne Bone Cyst
This is the classic look.
- a well-circumscribed corticated radiolucency
- below the inferior alveolar nerve, away from the teeth.
- They can be either oval, like this, or round in appearance
Mucous Cyst
Definition
Clinical features
Treatment
- Definition: a pseudocyst
- clinically you CANNOT tell the difference between a mucocele & mucous cyst and histologic features same as mucocele but will see an epithelial linin
treatment: same as mucocele; surgical excision
What is this clinical presentation
Nicotine Stomatitis.
What is this clinical finding?
Mandibular Torus:
Torus Mandibularis
What is the radiographical finding?
Botryoid Odontogenic
Cyst
What is the radiographic finding?
Paradental Cyst
What is this disease?
Paget’s Disease
Also Known As: Osteitis Deformans.
Skeletal disorder involving osteoclasts
Treatment: Osteoporosis drugs (bisphosphonates) are the most common treatment for Paget’s disease of bone
what is this radiographic finding?
Cropped Panaromic showing
a case of
Cemento‐ossifying
Fibroma
- Appreciate the radiolucent rim indicated by the black arrows.
- Also note the internal structure of the trabucular bone and compare it to adjacent unaffected areas. It is more granular and radopaque compared to adjacent areas.
- Another important feature to appreciate is the displacement of the anterior teeth (diverging roots)
- These features are usually seen in lesions with benign neoplastic characterstics.
What is this infectious disease?
Tertiary Syphilis
Gumma
‐ Latent period for 1 ‐ 30 years
‐ 30% of patients develop tertiary syphilis
‐ Serious complications develop:
- Vascular system
- Central nervous system
- Ocular lesions
What is “Gumma”?
- o Granulomatous inflammation with tissue destruction
- o Common on palate and tongue
- o Causes a hole in the palate
What is this infectious disease?
Median Rhomboid Glossitis
a subtype of Erythematous
Candidiasis
● “Central Papillary Atrophy”
● Well‐demarcated erythematous zone
● Loss of papillae on midline posterior dorsal tongue
● Usually, asymptomatic
● “Kissing” palatal lesion
‐ Because the tongue and the palate are in contact
with each other
● Can have a diamond shape
What is this infectious disease?
Measles
*Characterized by Koplik’s spots
salts/grains
What is this clinical presentation?
leukomia
o Multifocal bony destruction
o Widened PDL with leukemic infiltrate
▪ Symmetric widening of PDL space in a patient that doesn’t have that normal vertical bone loss that you associate with periodontal
disease.
▪ If see symmetrical bone loss in PDL space think malignancy, neoplastic
● Lymphomas, leukemias, osteocarcoma, chondro scaroma can
do this
What is this infectious disease?
Primary Syphilis
Chancre
at site of inoculation (3 – 90 days later)
‐ Papule ► Ulceration
‐ Most chancres occur in genital area (4% oral
What are HPV types that cause
Non‐genital Benign Involving the Skin?
2 & 4
What is Neoplasias?
- Immune cell tumors primarily involving bone marrow and peripheral blood are classified as leukemias
- while those of lymph nodes are classified as lymphomas,
- however there is often overlap of these entities
What is this radiologic finding
Florid COD
Two periapical radiographs of the left and right posterior mandible of the same patient.
In this case, note the areas of radiolucency and radiopacity are rather ill defined but widepsread to affect most of the teeth.
Most of the teeth noted here are restored.
So even if the radiographs suggest a cemento‐osseous process, it is important to keep an eye for these teeth in term of vitality and prevent a periapical infections which would otherwise secondarily infect the altered bone of COD.
What is this clinical finding?
Leukoedema
Stafne Bone Cyst
Etiology
- Believed to be developmental in origin, but usually noted only in _adults_
What is this histological finding?
Myxoma
▪ Mimics the histology of dental pulp
▪ Stellate, spindle, and round shaped cells set in a loose myxoid to
lightly collagenized stroma (if abundant mature collagen ‐
fibromyxoma)
▪ Abundant ground substance (mucopolysaccharide extracellular
matrix or GAGs)
▪ Can see residual bone trabeculae and scattered rests of odontogenic
epithelium
Diabetes Mellitus
Etiology
Etiology
- Decreased number of insulin receptors or defective receptors
- Genetic abnormalities, multifactorial
- Growing percent of the US population as well as around the world
Compound Odontoma
Vs
Complex Odontoma
Compound Odontoma
- Mature normal appearing pulp, enamel and dentin
- Organization like teeth, with enamel surrounding dentin which surrounds pulp ( Well developed rudimentary “tooth” forms)
- appear as small tooth‐like structures in the Anterior jaws (esp. MX)
Complex Odontoma
- Mature pulp, enamel and dentin
- No organization, mass of dentin and enamel matrix and pulp tissue (**Poorly developed mass of calcified deposits)
- appear as masses of radiopaque material with
- variable densities in the Posterior jaws (esp. MD)
What is this clinical finding?
Sialadenitis
Chronic: caused fibrosis
Cryptococcus is seen in ————–
pigeon excrement (poo)
SG Tumors: Summary of
Key Points
Involve both major and minor glands
Benign and malignant tumors both have similar
clinical presentation
Most malignant salivary gland tumors do not show histopathologic
characteristics associated with malignancy
Most occur in adults
Warthin Tumor seen in parotid, may be bilateral
Mucoepidermoid carcinoma
o Can occur in children
o May occur centrally in bone
case
Calcifying Epithelial Odontogenic Tumor
(CEOT)
Clinically: we see a little expansion on inferior aspect of mandible + lingual too
Radiographically: we see well‐circumscribed, a little corticated/sclerotic edge, impacted tooth
▪ we can see bowing of inferior aspect of mandible
▪ Within areas of radiolucency, see areas of opacity (calcified lesions = classic CEOT)
▪ When smaller► could have looked *unilocular*
What is this clinical finding?
Ranula
Notice how it’s unilateral
on the floor of the mouth
Which systemic disease shows radiographically like this ?
This is another medical CT scan. You see the granular appearance of
the maxilla, skull, and well-defined multilocular radiolucency with
granulation. We call this a brown tumor because it is associated with
hyperparathyroidism.
( systemic endocrine diseases)
Hypothyroidism
What happens in Hypothyroidism?
What it is called in children & adults?
How it is diagnosed?
What happens in Hypothyroidism?
- Decreased levels of thyroid hormone
What it is called in children & adults?
- cretinism in children
- myxedema in adults
How it is diagnosed?
- Diagnosed by measuring T4 (free thyroxine) in serum
Which systemic disease manifests radiographically like this?
Hypophosphatasia
SQUAMOUS PAPILLOMA
What is it?
Treatment?
▪ Benign proliferation of stratified squamous
epithelium resulting ► papillary, verruciform, rugose (ridged or wrinkled) mass
▪ HPV types 6 + 11 – Low risk
▪ **should remove from mouth – but WOULD NOT submit for HPV typing
What is this radiographic finding?
Simple Bone Cyst
✎Big lesion example: It’s going back to the molar area here.
✎You can see that the lesion extends over to the canine on the other side
✎Most lesions are usually in the anterior mandible
what is this radiographic finding?
FD
Note the normal left maxillary sinus and the obliterated space of the right maxillary sinus ( blue arrows).
A ground glass appearing entity (humogenous radiopaque lesion) has obliterated the space secondary to expansion of the right maxilla.
These findings are consistent and quiet common in advanced cases Firbous dysplasia
What is this clinical presentation?
Multiple Myeloma
Elevated M spike in serum ‐ abnormal increase in
immunoglobulin (hyperglobulinemia), most commonly IgG
▪ Reversal of normal albumin/globulin ratio
What is this clinical presentation?
Erythroplakia
Firey red Well-demarcated patch or plaque with soft velvety texture
transformed into SCC
What is this infectious disease?
Congenital Syphilis
‐ Hutchinson Incisors (left image)
‐ Mulberry molars (right image) - not part of the triad
What are these clinical findings?
Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma
Management of Oral HPV
Lesions
Solitary Lesions
‐ Usually appear exophytic and papillary
‐ Excision is warranted
‐ Consider possible recurrence
What is this clinical finding?
Epidermoid Cyst
A dome-shaped swelling.
There’s no change in the
overlying skin color, no redness, no pain
Reiter’s Syndrome (Reactive Arthritis)
Etiology
Etiology
- Thought to be due to an abnormal immune response to the infection
What is the clinical finding?
ACINIC CELL
ADENOCARCINOMA
blue‐ish tint
What is this clinical finding?
Multiple Myeloma
Deposition of amyloid in soft tissues
o Can cause macroglossia if tongue is involved
What are these clinical findings?
Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma
Ameloblastic
Fibrosarcoma
Treatment
- Radical surgical excision as the tumor is very aggressive and infiltrative
- Prognosis is dependent on complete removal of tumor
What is this radiographic finding?
Unilocular and unicystic ‐ An example of a unilocular ameloblastoma that is
not associated with an impacted tooth
▪ Is between roots of two teeth, may be confused with lateral
periodontal cyst. Well‐circumscribed radiolucency
What is this clinical presentation?
o hematoma
because of THROMBOCYTOPENIA orTrauma
THROMBOCYTOPENIA:▪ Markedly decreased numbers of circulating blood platelets (severe
cases < 10,000/mm³)
Etiology: Can be from:
o Decreased production (malignancy, drugs)
o Increased destruction (immunologic, drugs)
o Sequestration in the spleen (splenomegaly)
▪ Clinically see spontaneous gingival bleeding, petechiae,
ecchymosis and hematomas
o Clinically see some type of bleeding
▪ Treatment is usually platelet transfusion
Which systemic disease manifests radiographically like this?
Dwarfism
- hypopituitarism*
- We see* multiple dental anomalies: hypodontia, radicular fusion, fused roots of left lateral incisor and left canine and impacted permanent teeth.
- (from google)*
What is this infectious disease?
Describe it
HSV‐1: Primary
Infection
it is a raised blister/papule on the
vermilion
The bottom arrow pointing to a mucosal
ulcer w/ tan pseudomembrane.
Langerhans cell histiocytosis
Etiology
Etiology unclear
o Demonstration that LCH cells are clonal, along with the recent discovery of activating BRAF mutations in LCH cells, ►strongly suggests that LCH is a neoplastic disease
What is this radiographical finding?
Metastatic Carcinoma to Jaw Bones
D. Destruction of the left mandibular condyle (arrows) from a thyroid metastatic lesion
What is this infectious disease?
Primary Syphilis
Chancre
at site of inoculation (3 – 90 days later)
‐ Papule ► Ulceration
‐ Most chancres occur in genital area (4% oral
Congenital Syphilis is associated with what Triad?
‐ Pathognomonic features in Hutchinson triad:
o 1. Hutchinson teeth
o 2. Ocular interstitial keratitis
o 3. Eighth nerve deafness
‐ Other Features:
o High arched palate
o Saddle nose
o Frontal bossing
Clinical changes secondary to fetal infection
HHV‐8
What is it?
Assoicated with what?
How it evolved?
How it is treated?
Kaposi sarcoma–associated herpesvirus (KSHV)
❏ Vascular neoplasm of endothelium
❏ Associated with immunosuppression
❏ Usually evolves through 3 stages:
○ Patch►plaque►nodular
- More commonly seen in patients with HIV infection.
- Treated with topical agents and chemotherapy.
What is this radiographic presentation?
Sickle Cell Anemia
Radiographic findings include:
o decreased trabecular pattern in the mandible (due to
increased extramedullary hematopoiesis)
o laddering of inter‐radicular trabeculae
o “hair‐on‐end” appearance of skull films (less prominent
than with thalassemia)
Can see spontaneous pulpal necrosis in the absence of trauma or
caries
Surgical Ciliated
Cyst of the Maxilla
occurs frequently
after
which procedures?
- after a Caldwell-Luc procedure
- sometimes with difficult maxillary extractions
What is this clinical presentation?
Pemphigus Vulgaris.
Large, irregularly shaped ulcerations
involving the floor of the mouth and ventral tongue.
What is this clinical finding?
Untreated acinic cell adenocarcinoma
Because it is slow growing, and a low grade tumor, the
patient is alive and not dead with a tumor this size.
Similar presentation to pleomorphic adenomas, but there is a lot of ulceration on the surface and prominent vascularization in acinic cell
adenocarcinoma.
Dentigerous Cyst
also known as ?
Follicular Cyst
What is this clinical finding?
MUCOEPIDERMOID
CARCINOMA
What are these clinical findings?
Kaposi Sarcoma
- Widespread Kaposi, can see cutaneous lesions
- Oral images of this patient: on palate, starts with macule on patient’s left posterior palate –macular stage
- Then in becomes proliferative – exophytic nodular stage (seen on patient’s right anterior palate,surrounding canine and some incisors)
- Can see engorged blood vessels in area on histology slide
Dentigerous Cyst
Treatment
- Decompression: Try to open window in the jawand put tube into cyst lumen and have pt irrigate a few times a day for a few weeks ► release pressure and allows bone to grow back ► cyst will shrink
- If get rid of whole area surgically► c_an risk_ fracturing the jaw
What is this disease?
Describe it
Kaposi sarcoma
HHV 8
Kaposi sarcoma on
the skin:
>1cm
Different color, so
this is called a patch.
Erythematous
patches present on
multiple areas of the
face.
Which regions Paracoccidio Mycosis happen?
● Brazil -south America
So, also known as South American blastomycosis
Kaposi sarcoma
Histopathology
Histopathology shows malignant endothelial cells proliferating.
There are tiny spaces. Extravasation of RBCs can be seen
CGCG should be differentiated from ————-
brown tumor.
Most common non-odontogenic cyst of the oral cavity
Nasopalatine Duct Cyst
After the primary infection the HHV‐8 stays in ————
- *B‐lymphocytes (latency)**, **endothelial cells (Kaposi
sarcoma) **
Why any diagnosis of chondroma in the jaws should be viewed with suspicion?
- Since 20% of chondrosarcomas of the jaw are initially misdiagnosed as chondromas ► any diagnosis of chondromain the jaws should be viewed with suspicion
-
All cartilaginous tumors arising in the jaws should be excised widely
- (>60% of cartilaginous tumors of the jaw recur and ~7% metastasize to the lung and/or bone )
Hairy Leukoplakia
Treatment
- Not required
- however, in some cases aciclovir or valaciclovir
- can be used with success.
- Topical retinoids or podophyllum resin for temporary remission
Median Rhomboid Glossitis
Etiology
Atrophy of central filiform papillae
Presumably developmental. Candida albicans may also be
involved.
but smokers, people with xerostomia , who use inhalation steroids
and denture wearers are at increased risk
Smokeless tobacco keratosis
Treatment:
typically resolves weeks after cessation
○ if persists 6+weeks -> biopsy to rule out dysplasia + SCC
What is this clinical finding?
Aphthous ulcer (“The canker sore”)
What would it be like to have a canker sore on your uvula?
o Painful to swallow
‐ The location of the canker sore will predict the symptoms
What is this radiographic finding?
Osteosarcoma
- Classic sunburst pattern
- Fuzzy appearance on outer edges of cortex
How is Mucormycosis treated?
● Surgical debridement (massive tissue destruction)
● High doses of lipid formation of amphotericin B
● Control underlying disease (main one)
● Prosthetic obturation of palatal defects
Rubella
(German Measles)
Which viruse causes it?
How does it spread?
Clinical signs?
Assosited with what syndrome?
Is there a vaccine?
How it is diagnosed?
▪ Family: Togavirus; Genus: Rubivirus
▪ Respiratory droplets
lymphadenopathy
▪ Rash – maculopapular w/ desquamation
- *▪ Forchheimer sign**
- *▪ Palatal petechiae**
▪ Congenital rubella syndrome – pandemics in past
▪ Vaccine: MMR – so we barely see this anymore
▪ Diagnosis: by serology
What is this clinical presentation?
White Sponge Nevus
Diffuse, thickened white plaques
of the buccal mucosa
What is this radiographic finding?
we see calcifications forming, with both radiolucent and radiolucent areas.
▪ Dentingerous cyst, ameloblastoma, and OKC are NO LONGER in the differential diagnosis.
This is clearly AOT
_(_Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor)
What is this clinical finding?
Circumvallate papillae
What is this clinical presentation?
leukomia
Cause of infiltrate they has bone loss
What is this radiographic finding?
Ameloblastoma
- Small lesion distal to impacted tooth.
- Unilocular radiolucency with elevation of alveolar ridge + some expansion of soft tissue
What is the radiographic finding?
Paradental Cyst
What is this radiographic finding?
Aneurysmal Bone Cyst
✎ There’s a radiolucency involving the second molar
that’s going as far anterior as the first molar and back
to the third molar
✎ There is a little bit of spiking root resorption and
that’s one of the signs that we associate with
malignancy
✎ It’s a little bit ill-defined ~ hard to say exactly
where it begins and ends
Epidermoid Cyst
Etiology
- Often occur after _inflammation of a hair follicl_e
Differential Diagnosis for teritiary syphillis “Gumma”
Differential Diagnosis:
- ▪ T‐cell Lymphoma
- ▪ Cocaine abuse
- ▪ Granulomatosis
- ▪ Polyangiitis
- ▪ Mucor
What is this clinical presentation?
Hairy Leukoplakia
What is this radiographic finding?
Central odontogenic fibroma (COF)
- well‐circumscribed radiolucency posterior to molar
What is this radiographic finding?
Odontogenic Myxoma
What is this radiographic finding?
Surgical Ciliated
Cyst of the Maxilla
In this premolar shot (middle image) you can see a well-circumscribed lesion
✎Because the maxillary sinus is radiolucent, it almost looks like this is radiopaque but it’s not
✎ If you did a CBCT you would see that it’s an empty space within the bone of the maxilla. It’s not actually radiopaque
Drug Induced Gingival
Enlargement
What are the famous drugs that are known to cause it?
- Phenytoin: (or Dilantin) – the drug that used to be given to every single person that had seizures
-
Calcium-channel blockers
- Nifedipine not as prescribed anymore
- Dilitiazem still prescribe
- Amlodipine: is prescribed as one of the first line therapy for hypertension (very commonly prescribed); it doesn’t typically cause gingival overgrowth except in some selected patients, usually
those with pretty poor oral hygiene
-
Cyclosporine A (used for for bone marrow transplant, graft vs host disease, solid organ transplant)
- Cyclosporine is universally recognized as causing gingival hyperplasia
- Cyclosporine is largely replaced with Tacrolimus, which typically doesn’t cause gingival overgrowth
- Some drugs have more connective tissue component, others have more epithelial component
Not all identical under the microscope - Cyclosporine provides more epithelial change, Dilantin causes more of a connective tissue change
Paradental Cyst
Treatment
Extraction of the tooth along with the lesion
What is the clinical finding?
Eruption Cyst
Rx Topical
Treatments:
Corticosteroids
for
Ulcers/Ras
‐ Triamcinolone acetonide in Orabase 0.1% (intermediate)
o Disp: 5g tube Dental Past
o Label: apply a thin film over ulcer after meals and bedtime APOTHECON
o Do not use for more than 2 weeks
‐ Fluocinonide gel or ointment 0.05% (Potent)
o Disp: 15g tube
o Label: apply a thin film over
o Do not use for more than 2 weeks
‐ Clobetasol ointment 0.05% (Ultra potent)
o Disp: 15gtube Label: apply a thin film over ulcer bid
What is this radiographic finding?
Ameloblastic Fibroma
(AF)
1‐3 potential locules, no impacted tooth associated
PAPILLARY
CYSTADENOMA
LYMPHOMATOSUM
(WARTHIN TUMOR)
Etiology?
Treatment?
- Most common SG tumor to occur bilaterally (bilateral parotid swelling), but can be unilateral
- Etiology: Thought to arise within lymph nodes as a result of entrapment ofsalivary gland elements early in development
- Strong correlation with cigarette smoking
- Treatment: surgical excision, responds very well to it
What is this infectious diease?
SQUAMOUS PAPILLOMA
Benign Oral Low Risk HPV
Lesion
HPV 6+11
“finger‐like projections
- The projections are almost feathery
- exophytic lesion
White Sponge Nevus
Etiology
Autosomal dominant skin disorder
Etiology:
● This condition is due to a defect in the normal keratinization of the oral mucosa in the 30-member family of keratin filaments, the pair of keratins known as keratin 4 and keratin 13 is specifically expressed in the spinous cell layer of mucosal epithelium.
What is this infectious disease?
Chronic
Mucocutaneous
Candidiasis
Severe infection of mucosal surfaces, nails, and skin
What is this radiographic finding?
Periapical Cyst
What is this infectious disease?
Blastomycosis
Which systemic disease is associated with this symptom?
Pellagra
Deficience in Vitamine B3 (Niacin)
Chronic Hyperplastic Pulpitis
What is it?
Treatment?
- AKA: pulp polyp
- An e_xcessive proliferation of chronically inflamed dental pulp tissue_
• Treatment: RCT or extraction of tooth
What is the prognosis of Plasmacytoma
and how it is treated?
▪ Tx: radiation, better prognosis than MM
▪ Solitary better prognosis than disseminated MM
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
Amyloidosis
Submucosal amyloid deposit
What are Recurrent Herpes
Labialis‐ FDA Approved
Topical Treatments?
❏ Rx: Acyclovir cream 5% (Zovirax)
Disp: 5g tube
Label: dab on lesion every 2 hours for 4 days
❏ Rx: Penciclovir cream 1% (Denavir)
Disp: 5g tube
Label: dab on lesion every 2 hours for 4 days
❏ Rx: Docosanal cream (Abreva) OTC
Disp: 2g tube
Label: dab on lesion five times per day for 4 days
Acyclovir and Penciclovir
should be taken during
the prodrome stage
❏ Rx: Acyclovir 5%/ hydrocortisone 1% cream (Xerese)
Disp: 5g tube
Label: dab on lesion 5 times a day for 5 days
❏ Rx: Acyclovir buccal tablets (Sitavig) 50mg
Disp: 2 dose pack
Label: apply to canine fossa within 1 hour of symptoms
(single dose)
How is Gonorrhea
treated?
Many cases of resistance with antibiotics
§Cephalosporins
Adults with gonorrhea are treated with antibiotics. Due to emerging strains of drug-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that uncomplicated gonorrhea be treated with the antibiotic ceftriaxone — given as an injection — with oral azithromycin (Zithromax)
Which systemic disease is this?
Hyperparathyroidism
Here we see we see
- a granular appearance of the max and mand bone everywhere, it is not localized.
- There is a loss of bone density and the loss of definition of cortical bone.
- Here we see a loss of definition of lamina dura as well because it is now granular, and is not as clear.
What is this clinical finding
Swelling of gingiva
▪ Plasmacytoma
What is this clinical presentation?
Hematoma
because of THROMBOCYTOPENIA or Trauma
What is the treatment of Noma?
o Antibiotics
▪ Penicillin ▪ Metronidazole
o Local wound care
▪ Conservative debridement to avoid iatrogenic tissue damage
o Consider nutrition, hydration and electrolyte imbalances
o May cause significant morbidity
Botryoid Odontogenic
Cyst
Grossly and Microscopically
shows a grape‐like cluster of small
individual cysts
Necrotizing Periodontal Diseases
include 4 types,what are they? What do they mean?
‐ Includes:
o Necrotizing gingivitis (NG):rapidly destructive, non-communicable microbial disease of the gingiva
o Necrotizing periodontitis (NP):apidly progressing disease process that results in the destruction of the periodontium
o Necrotizing stomatitis (NS):When the bacterial infection extends further to OTHER parts of the mouth
o NOMA (extension to skin of face) ▪ Extreme disfigurement due to bacterial infection extending onto the skin of the face
Which systemic disease manifest radiographically like this?
Renal
Osteodystrophy 1
Presentation is variable. Sometimes you see denser or granular
appearance of bone. You see increase here
but you sometimes will also see loss of definition of lamina dura, sometimes a sclerotic appearance
and trabeculation.
Ossifying Fibroma is a ———
Benign neoplasm
What is the radiographic features of Fibrous dysplasia (FD)
• Maxillae affected more than mandible
• Ill‐defined borders, blends in with the surrounding bone (not necessary to be corticated)
• Variable density and orientation of the trabecular pattern (radiolucent, radiopaque or a combination)
- *• Ground‐glass appearance** (common)
- *• Peau d’orange (surface of an orange)** (common)
- *• Cotton wool appearance** (common)
- *• Fingerprint pattern** ( uncommon pattern)
• Typically the lesionss in the maxillae are more homogenous and radiopaque, whereas they may appear more heterogenous and mixed in the mandible.
*typically you’ll see the ground glass appearnce and Peau d’orange on the maxilla as they are homogenous the cotton wool appearance more commonly found in the mandible since it is heterogenous.
Which Systemic disease manifests radiographically like this?
Progressive Systemic
Sclerosis
(scleroderma)
- presence of widening of the PDL space everywhere around the root of the tooth.
What is the clinical finding?
Pyogenic Granuloma
We can see the corresponding radiograph;
-although the radiograph suggests generalized bone loss, there is a lot of calculus on
the distal of #16 > it makes sense that this is a pyogenic granuloma
What is this radiographic finding?
- You can see there’s a little bit of radiolucency.
- There happened to actually still be teeth in the area, but
- when it was biopsied it showed that it was a
- hematopoietic or osteopoietic bone marrow defect
Calcifying Odontogenic Cyst COC
Treatment
■Enucleation with peripheral ostectomy ~ Very similar to odontogenic keratosis
■ Follow up is long term because s_ome of the solid tumors have a more aggressive behavior_
■ Peripheral lesions are treated with excision
▪ The most common cyst of the jaws
Periapical Cysts
What causes Impetigo?
‐ Caused by:
o Staphylococcus aureus
o Streptococcal pyogenes
Damaged skin allows infection to enter
Usually affects kids
What is the histological features of Tuberculosis
Granulomas
- o Epithelioid histiocytes
- o Multinucleated giant cells
- ▪ * Langhans giant cells
- ● Nuclei along the periphery
- ▪ * Langhans giant cells
- o Central caseous necrosis
What is Chronic Suppressive
Therapy for fungal diseases?
this is when you keep the fungal infection under control for a
long time
Usually unnecessary in immunocompetent patients
● For patients who have recurrent infections:
‐ For HIV‐infected patients, antiretroviral therapy is strongly
recommended to reduce the incidence of recurrent infections
(strong recommendation; high‐quality evidence).
‐ Fluconazole, 100 mg 3 times weekly, is recommended (strong
recommendation; high‐quality evidence).
● Clotrimazole 10mg troches 1 week out of every month? (no evidence
Which systemic disease shows radiographically like this?
we have 2 Pas of patients
with pseudohypoparathyroidism.
- hypoplasia of enamel, tooth material
- hypoplastic tooth bud ( hypoplastic means arrested development)
- delayed eruption,
- external root resorption.
Secondary Amyloidosis
systemic
Etiology & Effects
- Due to chronic inflammatory process
- *(osteomyelitis, TB,** sarcoidosis)
- Affects liver, kidney, spleen, adrenals but not heart
- can affect multiple organs, heart is usually spared
What cyst is a variant of lateral periodontal cyst?
Botryoid Odontogenic
Cyst
What are these clinical findings (What is the syndrome or complex)?
Sturge-Weber
Angiomatosis
Sturge-Weber syndrome
Notice how the vascular malformation is only one side..
Remember: Vascular changes follow trigeminal nerve, so it doesn’t cross midline
Which Gene mutation and pathway
associated with
Nevoid Basal Cell Carcinoma
Syndrome
(Gorlin syndrome)
- Mutation of PTCH (tumor suppressor gene)
- in the Sonic Hedge Hog pathway
What is this clinical presentation?
Hodgkins lymphoma
What is this clinical presentation?
Erythroplakia.
Erythematous macule on the right
floor of the mouth.
Biopsy–
Turned out to be early invasive squamous cell
carcinoma.
What is this clinical finding?
Langerhans Cell Disease
▪ Older child
▪ Chronic disseminated form
▪ Alveolar ridge involvement
▪ Lot of bone loss and mobility
▪ Painful to brush
Uremic Stomatitis
Treatment
▪ Usually clears within a few days after renal dialysis has begun
▪ Mildly acidic mouth rinses seem to clear oral lesions (ex. diluted hydrogen peroxide)
▪ Palliative treatment for pain includes ice chips or a topical anesthetic
Granular Cell Tumor
What is it?
Treatment?
What is it?
Benign tumor derived from
Schwann cells
Treatment
• Treated by surgical excision (Be careful with excision! no need
to get all of it out, just most of it)
rarely recurs
What is this infectious disease?
Primary Syphilis
Chancre
at site of inoculation (3 – 90 days later)
‐ Papule ► Ulceration
‐ Most chancres occur in genital area (4% oral
What is this clinical presentation?
Non-homogenous leukoplakia
Nodular leukoplakia ~ Largely white
Verrucous leukoplakia ~ Largely white
Erythroleukoplakia ~ Red and white
Speckled and verrucous leukoplakia have a greater risk for malignant
transformation than the homogeneous form
e At which stage should the
abortive/ episodic treatment be done to avoid the outbreak?
❏ the prodrome, prodrome treatment is abortive
**remember this!**
What is this clinical presentation?
Geographic tongue/
areata migrans
What is this clinical presentation?
Aplastic Anemia
- One of the main differences between and neutropenic ulcer and an empthis ulcer? Is the red halo, the mucosa surroundingneutropenic ulcer Is pale and not red.
- The center of a neutropenic ulcer has granulation tissue with a little bit of white
What is Cat‐Scratch
Disease?
‐ Infectious disease which is seen in lymph nodes
What is this radiographic finding?
Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor
(AOT)
- Teardrop shape / inverted pear between roots of teeth.
- Well-circumscribed, corticated margin & snowflake‐like calcifications within
What is this trabecular pattern of the FD?
Fingerprint pattern
The arrow indicating the inter‐radicular area of this molar. You can see the trabecular
bone has been altered into a fingerprint pattern.
This is a case of localized fibrous dysplasia.
Very uncommon.
What is this infectious disease?
Leprosy
Which systemic disease shows radiographically like this?
pt with Osteopetrosis
we see
Hypovascular bones so they are more prone to osteomyelitis. This is a sign of sequestrum which is a sign of osteomyelitis.
What is this radiographic finding?
Osteosarcoma
- cloudy bone formation on surface of cortex on facial and lingual aspect
Pyogenic Granuloma
What a differential diagonsis to consider if we see it
- if it’s on the gingival tissues, take a radiograph
- always consider SCC as a differential diagnosis
What is this clinical presentation?
Homogeneous leukoplakia
○ Thickened leathery, White plaque
○ Well-demarcated, Deepened fissures
○ Non-wipeable white patch
Which systemic disease manfiest like this?
Addison’s Disease
What is this radiographic finding?
Simple Bone Cyst
- A well-circumscribedshowing the scalloping up between the roots of the teeth radiolucency
Gingival cyst of the newborn/ Dental lamina cysts/Cysts of the Newborn-gingival
Lateral Periodontal
Cyst
Treatment
- consists of conservative enucleation
What is this clinical finding?
Mucous Cyst
What causes scrofula?
Mycobacterium bovis
Infected milk leads to scrofula
RARE today as milk is pasteurized
Aneurysmal Bone Cyst
Treatment
■ Treatment is surgical enucleation and curettage
■ lesions can recur ~ Usually the recurrence is because
you didn’t get the entire thing out the first time around
■ Some surgeons follow enucleation with cryotherapy
■ Irradiation is contraindicated
What is Aplastic Anemia?
What it is associated with?
Who are at increased risk of developing this anemia?
▪ Failure of the hematopoietic precursor cells to produce adequate numbers of all types of blood components
▪ Rare, but life threatening
▪ Associated with environmental toxins (benzene), certain drugs
(antibiotic chloramphenicol), or infection with certain viruses
(non‐A, non‐B, non‐C, non‐G hepatitis)
▪ Fanconi’s anemia and dyskeratosis congenita patients have an
increased risk of developing this
What type of Alpha‐thalassemia is not compatible with life
When there are Four defective genes – Hb Bart’s hydrops fetalis
o Lethal in utero or within a few hours of birth
o Not compatible with life
▪ Estimated that 5% of world population carries a variant of Alpha‐thalassemia (over 100 genetic forms)
▪ One defective gene –
o no disease detected
▪ Two defective genes – alpha‐thalassemia trait
o Mild degree of anemia (usually not clinically significant)
▪ Three defective genes – Hb (hemoglobin) H disease
o Hemolytic anemia and splenomegaly
What is this clinical finding?
‐ Aphthous Ulcer of the tongue
‐ Aphthous ulcers can occur on specialized structures of the mouth
What is this infectious diseease?
What is its pathogensis ?
HSV‐1: Primary
Infection
pathogensis
❏ Usually young age
❏ Often asymptomatic
❏ Symptomatic = Primary herpetic gingivostomatitis
❏ In adults is usually pharyngotonsillitis (back of throat)
❏ Spread through infected saliva or active lesions
❏ Incubation period = 3‐9 days
These photos represent
gingivostomatitis
multiple irregularly shaped
ulcers present on the fixed and movable mucosa, bilaterally
Crohn Disease
Regional Ileitis
When it is diagnosed?
Etiology?
Prevalence?
What are the oral implactions?
When it is diagnosed?
● Usually initially diagnosed in adolescents
Etiology?
● Etiology unknown‐ immunologically mediated?
o Theory of being too clean as a child and having a negative response as we grow older since we’re not used to normal bacteria
Prevalence?
● Prevalence increasing, reason unknown
What are the oral implactions?
●Oral lesions can be first sign of disease
What is this clinical finding?
Venous
malformation (low
flow)
Many pts can live with this without treatment
What is Sickle cell crisis
What trigger it?
What are the symptoms?
effect on dental tx?
consequences?
- sickling of the RBCs becomes severe
- precipitated by such things as hypoxia, infection,
hypothermia, or dehydration - Symptoms include pain (which may be severe) due to ischemia
and infarction of affected tissues
▪ Long bones, lungs and abdomen are common sites of occurrence for “crises”
▪ Episodes last from 3‐10 days, some patients have monthly crises, some may go a year or more between
▪ May need pre‐medication prior to dental treatment -
infections are the most common cause of death in sickle cell
patients (in the US)
▪ Patients also have impaired kidney function and CNS involvement (strokes in 5‐8%, often prior to age of 10)
What is this clinical presentation?
microcytic,
hypochromic anemias
(iron deficiency):
Pallor
▪ Anemia: reduction in O2 carrying capacity
▪ Diagnosis: RBC counts, Hg, HCT, red cell indices for dx of type of
anemia
▪ Normal upper labial mucosa
▪ Pale lower labial mucosa
What is this clinical presentation?
Mucous membrane pemphigoid
What are these clinical findings (what is the name of the syndrome or complex?)
Tuberous sclerosis complex
we see A lot of gingival enlargement – is this overgrowth from disease or from seizure medication? Multi organ system involvement
Gingival cyst of the newborn
Treatment
▪ No treatment is necessary
▪ Spontaneously resolve (degenerate or rupture)
CEMENTOBLASTOMA
Treatment
(True Cementoma)
- surgical extraction of the involved tooth with attached tumor
- Root amputation (with attached tumor) and endo is an option for smaller lesions
- Recurrence is unlikely
What is this infectious disease?
Pseudomembranous Candidiasis
Topical
Corticosteroid Use
Can be brought about from steroid use (steroid inhaler example)
‐ If you don’t rinse your mouth after using steroids, this can happen
■ A proliferation of hyphae
Pemphigus vulgaris
Etiology
Pemphigus vulgaris is not fully understood.
Experts believe that it’s triggered when a person who has a genetic tendency to get this condition comes into contact with an environmental trigger, such as a chemical or a drug.
In some cases, pemphigus vulgaris will go away once the trigger is removed.
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
hypothyroidism,
in child, still has
deciduous teeth even though its an older child
Radiographically we see the teeth have not erupted in the oral cavity
What is this clinical finding
Pellagra
Deficience in Vitamine B3 (Niacin)
Dermititis of the skin
what is this clinical presentation?
Denture stomatitis.
Which Candida is the most common species with what kind of Candidal Sepsis and
Disseminated Candidiasis ?
C. albicans
- Candidal sepsis means that you have the fungal moving around in your body
- Life‐threatening event in individual with severely deficient cell
- mediated immunity
- Most commonly involves urinary tract infection (women/men 4:1)
- Very rare
What is this clinical finding?
Necrotizing Sialometaplasia
What is this clinical presentation?
Cyclic Neutropenia
▪ Gingiva is most severely affected with periodontal bone loss and
tooth mobility
What causes Anemias of Chronic Renal Insufficiency?
low levels of
erythropoietin – organ disease
What is this oral finding?
This is showing you the how the
papilla can be enlarged if it’s only
in soft tissue or if there’s a partial
soft tissue partial bone expansion
Nasopalatine Duct Cyst
which leukemia always in children?
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)
Success in treatment of a previously fatal disease
Children age 1‐10 years have higher success with
treatments than teenager do (10‐20yrs)
o And infants (under 1yr) do the worst
Chemotherapy that are given for curing ALL actaully
causes problems when they are older.
What is this clinical finding?
Sublingual Varices
What is the etiology of fibrous dysplasia?
GNAS1 gene mutation in fibrous dysplasia is a potential diagnostic adjuvant, as it is not
found in normal bone tissue (etiolog
How to treat Blastomycosis?
● Most cases asymptomatic
● Itraconazole (mild to moderate disease)
● Systemic amphotericin B (severe cases)
● There is a connection with people taking TNF‐alpha inhibitors
Herpes Simplex Virus
primary infection
○ Acute/Primary Herpetic Gingivostomatitis
○ The easy way to remember where the ulcerations occur?
➢ gingiva and oral cavity
gingivo (=gingiva or fixed keratinized mucosa)
+
stoma (= the movable part of the oral cavity where the CT is
looser, including the labial and buccal mucosa, and the
tongue).
MUCOEPIDERMOID
CARCINOMA
Can be mistaken for
Histopahtology
Most common malignancy of salivary glands
Most common malignant SG tumor in children
Can be mistaken for mucocele
Histopathology: note the cells growing into adjacent tissue, showing infiltration
Which cyst is assoicated with
Nevoid Basal Cell Carcinoma
Syndrome
?
Odontogenic Keratocyst
“OKC”
What causes Cat‐Scratch
Disease ?
‐ Causative organism:
o Bartonella henselae
‐ Previous contact with a cat (scratch or saliva)
What is this clinical presentation?
Pemphigus Vulgaris.
What is this clinical finding?
Langerhans Cell
Disease
we see lesions on maxilla
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
Pseudohypoparathyroidism
issues with eruption, no
pulp stones present
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
Uremic Stomatitis
What is Syphilis?
What causes it/
- Chronic infection
- caused by spirochete Treponema pallidum
What is this clinical finding?
Ranula
- Notice how it’s unilateral*
- on the floor of the mouth*
What are these clinical findings (which syndrome or complex)?
Neurofibromatosis syndrome
von Recklinghausen’s Disease
- Lisch nodules on iris, pigmented (eye picture)
- Neurofibromatosis in mouth (bottom left picture)
- Café au lait (bottom right picture)
What is this disease?
Cherubism
Treatment: Usually not needed as the cyst-like lesions fill in with granular bone during adolescence- conservative surgical procedures may follow for cosmetic reasons.
what is this infectious disease?
Aspergillosis
arrow points toward a violaceous‐ purple colour
What is this clinical presentation?
microcytic,
hypochromic anemias
(iron deficiency):
Pallor
▪ Anemia: reduction in O2 carrying capacity
▪ Diagnosis: RBC counts, Hg, HCT, red cell indices for dx of type of
anemia
▪ Normal upper labial mucosa
▪ Pale lower labial mucosa
What is this radiographic finding?
▪ Child with disseminated form
▪ Punched out radiolucency in the skull
How is Oral
Candidiasis Diagnosed?
● Clinical signs
● Therapeutic diagnosis
● Cytologic smear: scrape cells and look at them under the microscope
and stained with PAS stain
● Periodic Acid Schiff Stain (PAS stain)
● KOH float §Biopsy (esp. hyperplastic candidiasis)
● Culture
What is this clinical finding?
PLEOMORPHIC ADENOMA
- Upper lip presentation: sometimes swelling can be seen extra orally and intraorally.
- Remember the swelling will be movable, not tender, not fixed to underlying structures.
(MIXED TUMOR)
What is this clinical finding?
Mandibular Torus:
Torus Mandibularis
What is this histological presentation?
Plasma Cell Disorders
Clock face nucleaus
What causes Anemias of Chronic Disease?
inflammatory conditions, malignancy
– organ disease
Multiple Myeloma
Treatmet
Treatment can include :
- chemotherapy with or without Radtiaion Therapy
- bone marrow transplant
- interferon
- antibodies made against tumor cells
- thalidomide
- Even with treatment, many patients do not survive more than 18‐24 months, however treatment modalities are improving
- Older patients are treated less aggressively
What is this clinical finding?
▪ Child with bone loss surround the teeth
▪ Floating teeth
disseminated form
What is this clinical presentation?
Nicotinic Stomatitis
These papules represent inflamed minor salivary glands and their ductal orifices.
What is this clinical presentation?
Cyclic Neutropenia
▪ Depending on surface involved, can mimic recurrent aphthous
ulcerations
o Usually do not see erythematous halo that is so typical of
aphthous
What is this radiographic finding?
Ameloblastoma
▪ Well‐circumscribed radiolucency with a sclerotic or
corticated margin.
▪ If you had a CBCT, it would probably show you that there
was a thin septa in this area of residual bone trabeculae.
▪ Fracture could be caused by very large cysts.
▪ Resolve by decompressing unless with odontogenic tumor – need to remove the mandible 1cm+ on either side of lesion
Which infectious disease has fruting body in its histopathology?
Aspergillosis
Histopathology includes:
●Branching septate hyphae
● Acute angle branching
● “Fruiting body
what is this radiographic finding?
Cemento‐ossifying
Fibroma
Note the internal granular appearance of the trabucular bone ( black arrows)
The purple arrows shows the wall of the expanded buccal/facial and lingual cortical plates caused by the neoplastic entity.
This was a confirmed cased of ossifying fibroma* mainly because of two things:
1. siginficant cortical expansion on buccal and lignual side
2. altered trabacular pattern.
ddx of fibrous dysplasia but you should look for a radiolucent rim
if you can and if not, they maybe considered under the same differential diagosnsis.
Note that may help you in differentiating :
The maxilla is affected more in Fibrous dysplasia
The mandible is affected more in Ossifying fibroma
What is this clinical presentation?
Hematoma
because of THROMBOCYTOPENIA orTrauma
MUCOEPIDERMOID
CARCINOMA
Treatment
Prognosis
Therapy by gene?
Treatment: Usually treated by surgical excision
Prognosis:
• Overall prognosis is fairly good
• 10% of patients die, due to local recurrence or metastasis
Low‐grade tumors have good prognosis (>90% are cured)
High‐grade tumors the prognosis is guarded (Only 30% survive)
Therapy by gene?
CRTC1–MAML2, CRTC3‐MAML2 gene fusions (targeted therapy)
What is the most common
developmental cyst of the neck?
Thyroglossal Duct Cyst
What is this infectious disease?
describe it
HHV3
Varicella (chickenpox)
It is caused by
Varicella Zoster
Virus Infection
a typical macular, papular, vesicular rash –
it’s bilateral
What are HPV types that cause
Genital Benign Lesions?
6, 11, 16, 18
(condyloma – can be malignant)
Aplastic Anemia
treatment
supportive care initially, attempts to stimulate bone marrow (androgenic steroids), and bone marrow transplants for severe cases (prognosis is guarded at best)
Which systemic disease manifests radiographically like this?
large root canal structures, large root chambers, premature loss of
teeth = hypophosphatasia.
What is the radiographical finding?
Lateral Periodontal
Cyst
What is this clinical finding?
Congenital Epulis
Which systemic disease has this oral manifestation?
hypothyroidism
woman who had
hypothyroidism, lips are thickened, thick creases in the face
What is this radiographical finding?
CENTRAL
MUCOEPIDERMOID
CARCINOMA
- Intrabony presentations, may have extraoral swelling depending on the stage
- Started as small swelling and progressed rapidly:, need to pick it up early!
- Patient recovered, but might need radiation, lost salivary glands, needed reconstruction of palate
What is this clinical finding?
Transient Lingual
Papillitis
- ‐ Relatively rare
- ‐ Canker sore meets fungiform papilla of tongue
- Multiple papilla can become inflamed (above image)
- Very painful
- ‐ Ulcer Appearance:
- Tiny
- Transient
- On fungiform papilla of tongue
- ‐ Typically resolves in 7‐10 days
What is this radiologic finding
Periapical COD
Pink arrow
Simple bone cysts may develop in regions of COD ( periapical or florid type)
So look for areas void of trabucular bone and has scalopping of the lesion.
green
What is this radiographic finding?
Classic appearance of Odontoma
- multiple tooth‐like shapes aggregated together
- Typically with some sort of radiolucent halo around them
What is this clinical presentation?
Nicotinic Stomatitis
also known as
Smoker’s keratosis
smoker’s palate
- the palatal mucosa becomes diffusely gray or white; numerous slightly elevated papules are noted, usually with punctate red centers
What is this clinical finding?
Dermoid Cyst
- This is showing you when they occur below the mylohyoid muscle.
- You get an elevation under the chin.
- This is a fairly small one but they can get much larger
What is the histological finding?
Odontogenic
Keratocyst
Histology
Notice the daughter cysts
What causes Actinomycoses?
‐ Associated Bacteria:
o Actinomyces israelii
o Actinomyces viscosus
‐ Normal component of oral flora -gram positive anaerobic
bacteria
What is this clinical presentation?
Oral lichen planus
Lichen planus of the dorsum of the tongue
this is a hypertrophic form.
What is this radiographical finding?
Metastatic Carcinoma to Jaw Bones
A. Partial panoramic image of prostate metastatic lesions involving the body and ramus; note the sclerotic bone reaction (arrows).
What is this disease?
Cleido-Cranial
Dysplasia
Treatment: For children, facial reconstructive surgery on the bones of the face to reshape the forehead or cheekbones. Spinal fusion procedures to support the spinal column. Lower leg surgery to correct knock knees (knees that bend inward toward the center of the body)
Residual Cyst
Treatment
-Removal
- Enucleation if small
- Marsupialization if large
- Note:*
- Enucleation* means: removal of an organ or other mass intact from its supporting tissues
Marsupialization means: surgical technique of cutting a slit into an abscess or cyst to empty its contents and suturing the edges of the slit to form a continuous surface from the exterior surface to the interior surface of the cyst or abscess.
Promotes Decompressing and shrinkage.
Leukoedema
Etiology
Treatment
Etiology
It is due to increased thickness of the epitheliumand intracellular
edema of the prickle-cell layer.
Treatment
No treatment required
Compare between SCC in Squamous Cell Carcinoma caused by HPV vs Tobacco and Alcohol
▪ HPV associated SCCa
‐ Wild type TP53
‐ Low pRb
‐ Increased p16
▪ Tobacco and Alcohol associated SCCa
‐ *Mutated TP53 – mutated by carcinogens in tobacco and alcohol► cancer
‐ pRB overexpression
‐ Decrease p16
What are these two disease?
Sometimes, simple bone cysts should be differentiated from odontogenic keratocysts (OKCs)
What is this infectious disease?
Secondary Syphilis
Mucous Patch
Buccal Bifurcation Cyst
Etiology
unclear
Necrotizing Sialometaplasia
Definition
Predisposing factors
Treatment
- *• Definition:** locally destructive inflammatory condition — looks malignant but is benign
- • salivary gland ischemia* — “heart attack of the palate”; blood flow is interrupted
• predisposing factors:
- local trauma
- palatal injection of local anesthesia
- previous surgery
- many are idiopathic..
• usually a clinical diagnosis based on history & how fast — palate uncommon for SCC
- Treatment: no treatment, spontaneously resolves within 6 to 10 weeks
- irrigating & debriding the area can reintroduce vascularity & help healing
Sickle Cell Anemia
What is it?
What causes it?
What is it?
Chronic hemolytic blood disorder
What causes it?
▪ Abnormal hemoglobin, resulting in anemia -> by increasing the production of red blood cells -> requires compensatory hyperplasia of the bone marrow
Kaposi Sarcoma
Etiology
Types
Treatment
Etiology:Caused by HHV-8 (human herpesvirus 8) /part of herpes family
Treatment
- Surgical excision, radiation therapy or systemic chemotherapy for multiple nonoral lesions, if it gets large, dose-radiation therapy!
Schwannoma/ Neurilemoma
What is it?
Treatment?
malignant
transformation ?
What is it?
• Benign neoplasm of Schwann cell origin
• Uncommon lesion: 28-48% occur in the
head and neck
• Treatment
• surgical excision
malignant
transformation
reported, but rare
What is this radiographic finding?
Cemento‐ossifying
Fibroma
Axial section of the
mandible
- The granular radiopacity immediately surrounded by a radiolucent rim ( purple arrow)
- Also note the extent of the expansion of the buccal and lingual cortical plates, a feature which is common of ossifying fibroma.
- This is more clear radiographically where we see a radiolucent rim surrouding a mixed radiolucent/radiopaque center and there is a siginficant expansion of the buccal and lingual plates. ► very common in ossifying fibroma
What is this clinical presentation?
Homogeneous leukoplakia.
○ Non-wipeable white patch
What is this radiographic finding?
In addition to fracture, there is semilunar loss of bone around the molars ► (SOT)
Squamous Odontogenic Tumor
TYPES OF
CANDIDIASIS
INFECTION
● Superficial and localized‐more common (mild disease)
‐ Intertrigo §Paronychia/Onychomycosis
‐ “Diaper Rash”
‐ Vulvovaginitis
‐ Esophageal Candidiasis §Oral Candidiasis (Candidosis)
● Invasive, disseminated and deep infection‐rare (moderate‐severe)
‐ Affects blood (candidemia‐hospitalized), heart, brain, eyes, bones)
Osteoporotic Bone Marrow Defect
Etiology
- Etiology unclear
- may be hyperplasia of marrow due to need for RBCs or
- abnormal regeneration of bone after an extraction or persistence of fetal marrow
What causes Megaloblastic Anemias
?
o Folic Acid def
o Vit B12 def (pernicious anemia)
What is this clinical finding?
Herpetiform aphthous stomatitis
- Apppears like herpesvirus but unrelated to it
- account for 5% of cases (the least common)
Appearance:
- begin as multiple (up to 100) 1- to 3-mm crops of small, painful clusters of ulcers on an erythematous base.
- They coalesce to form larger ulcers that last 2 weeks.
- A bunch of smaller ulcers that coalesce
What is this clinical finding?
Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor
(AOT)
An expansion into lingual area as well as into vestibule
Basal Cell Carcinoma
Progrssion
(BCC)
within 5 years of being diagnosed with
BCC►35%-50% of people develop a new skin cancer
What is this radiographic finding?
Antral Pseudocyst
- a Dome-shape swelling on the floor of the sinus.
- They can sometimes be fairly subtle
Antral Pseduocyst are NOT Mucoceles
Mucoceles would have more of meniscus-like
appearancewhere it would come up tothe edge of
the sinus
Oral lichenoid reaction
Treatment
Insicional biopsy Mandated to distinguish from OLP
○ Biopsy white areas on non-keratinized mucosa NOT ulcerated OR red areas
Treatment Replacement of the restorative material, polishing and
smoothing, and good oral hygiene are recommended.
Topical steroid
treatment for a short time is also helpful.
what is the treatment for Histoplasmosis?
acute
chronic
Disseminated
● Acute‐Supportive (analgesics and antipyretics)
● Chronic‐IV lipid preparation of amphotericin B or itraconazole
● Disseminated‐Lipid preparation of amphotericin B (2 weeks or more) followed by daily itraconazole for 6‐18 months
People with chronic Polycythemia are at
increased risk of —— or ——-
- *of MI or CVA (cerebral vascular accident or
stroke) **
radicular cyst, inflammatory cyst are other names for
Periapical Cysts
What is this clinical finding?
Minor Recurrent
Aphthous Ulcers
(RAS)
- aka‐ “Canker Sores”
- ‐ High prevalence: 5‐25%
- ‐ Comprises the overwhelming majority of cases
- o 75‐85% of ALL RAS cases
- ‐ <10 mm in diameter
- ‐ Ulcer appearance:
- o Shallow
- o Round/Oval Shaped
- o Yellow pseudomembrane
- ▪ Slightly raised margin
- ▪ Erythematous Halo
-
‐ Typically resolves in 7‐10 days
- o *May take longer if in a “high‐traffic” site
- ‐ No scarring
- ‐ Recurrence rates vary
What is this disease?
Kaposi Sarcoma
(HHV‐8)
Right photo: we see Patch, slightly raised plaque stage
○ This is different from hemangioma because if you press on it, it
doesn’t blanch (where all the blood goes away, and it looks
white)
Left photo: Nodular is when it becomes very exophytic
You need to do a biopsy for this because it looks irregular.
What is this clinical presentation?
Geographic tongue: well-demarcated red patch on the tongue.
What is the radiographical finding?
Odontogenic
Keratocyst
OKC
What is this radiographic finding??
Idiopathic
Osteosclerosis
AKA: Dense Bone Island
Not associated with any dysplastic, neoplastic, inflammatory or systemic disorder.
Common incidental finding.
Slow growing, typically stops growing by the time of skeletal maturity.
Peak prevalence in the third decade of life.
No treatment required; monitoring is suggested.
NOMA is also called as ————
cancrum oris
Small Dentigerous Cyst
are hard to differentiate radiographically from —?
enlarged/hyperplastic follicle
Rule of thumb:
- If 4‐5mm or more of radiolucency ► dentigerous cyst
- If <4mm of radiolucency► can be hyperplastic follicle
Types of leukemia
Divided into acute and chronic, myeloid and lymphoid
o Acute myeloid, chronic myeloid, acute lymphoid, and
chronic lymphoid
▪ Acute leukemia
o Typical course under 6 mos
o Untreated, runs an aggressive course often causing death
▪ Chronic leukemia
o 2‐6 or more years
o More indolent course, although, they too often result in
death
▪ Leukemia, like lymphoma, can cause bone destruction and the
radiographic appearance of “teeth floating in air” in children
Nicotine Stomatitis.
Etiology
The elevated temperature, rather than the tobacco chemicals,
is responsible for this lesion.
What is the Differential Diagnosis D/D of Multilocular Radiolucency
MOCHA
- M odontogenic Myxoma
- O Odontogenic keratocyst
- C Central giant cell granuloma
- H Central Hemangioma
- A _A_meloblastoma
Others:
- Aneurysmal bone cyst
- early CEOT
- ameloblastic fibroma AF
- central MECa
How is Cat‐Scratch Disease
treated?
o Self‐limiting (resolves within 4 months)
o Local heat
o Analgesics
o Mechanical removal of suppuration (aspiration)
o May use antibiotics for severe cases
▪ Azithromycin
Odontogenic Myxoma
Treatment
- Surgical excision or resection
- Because the lesion is not encapsulated and has a gelatinous loose consistency► it is difficult to remove completely
- this is thought to be why myxoma has a fairly high recurrence rate
- Maxillary posterior lesions should be treated more aggressively
What is the clinical finding?
ACINIC CELL
ADENOCARCINOMA
Geographic tongue/
areata migrans
Etiology
The exact etiology remains unknown. It may be genetic.
What is Denture Stomatitis
Treatment?
YOU APPLY THE MEDICATION TO THE INTAGLIO PORTION
antifungal medication
(1) Topical Antifungal Agents
‐ Rx. Clotrimazole cream 1% vs OR
‐ Rx. Nystatin‐Triamcinolone Acetonide ointment or cream (why?
To keep the inflammation down)
■ Disp: 15g tube
■ Label: apply to angles of mouth after meals and before
bedtime
(2) Denture adjustment, reline, remake
YOU APPLY THE MEDICATION TO THE INTAGLIO PORTION
What is this infectious disease?
Miliary TB
compared to miliary seeds
What is this clinical presentation?
Plasma cell gingivitis
▪ Allergen causes mass infiltrate into gingival
▪ Benign
What are these clinical findings?
Langerhans Cell Disease
Torus and molar involvement
Which systemic disease mainfest radiographically like this?
Thalassemia
- osteopenic bone (loss bone mass and bones get weaker)
- radiolucent appearance of bone
- thinning of cortical bone around the mandible and maxilla.
- Usually there is hypoplasia of the paranasal sinuses.
What is this radiographic finding?
Adenomatoid odontogenic tumor
(AOT)
Snowflake‐like calcifications within mixed, well‐circumscribed radiolucency
What is this clinical finding?
Fimbriated
fold/Plica
semiluminaris
Case
40 year old male
Completely healthy otherwise
Not taking any medications
Presents with bump on the tongue
First question: did you do anything that might have led to this? Bite your tongue?
“possible I bit my tongue, or it could be when I had a dental procedure, maybe they accidentally
cut into the side of my tongue” – then it developed
This tells us, is this a reactive lesion?
Is it pedunculated or sessile? It’s pedunculated, larger at the top than the base
Let’s look at the surface: it’s ulcerated
When palpating, it’s only on the surface - don’t feel any submucosal presentation
Tongue underneath feels relatively normal
This bump is kind of firm and it bleeds like crazy when you touch it
When you look at teeth, no area where they’re too sharp
Do you think it’s a fibroma? No. Why?
Fibroma is covered with normal coloring epithelium – sometimes see a little white change on surface or see tiny traumatic ulcer on surface This is not like that, this is completely ulcerated
Not fibroma; fibroma is a chronic bump that patient is aware of
Is it squamous cell carcinoma? Interesting, it is indeed very friable; but no
Sometimes SCC can develop and can be exophytic and don’t have deep invasion, But this is pedunculated, SCC would not be pedunculated
History says there could be some kind of trauma, biting, or nick with bur – not squamous cell
Mucocele? No
Would you typically develop mucocele on lateral border of tongue? No
Not going to be as many mucoceles in this area, but there are the glands of Blandin and Nuhn, so it’s possible to develop on ventral surface of tongue
This bump doesn’t look like a fluid filled bump though, it has surface ulceration, redness ;Mucoceles have intact surface, would not bleed, or be red
Granular cell tumor? No
Granular cell tumor would have normal overlying epithelium (it’s pushing up from underneath)
This does not have normal overlying epithelium
Hemangioma reserved for congenital; not a vascular malformation either
Neurofibroma? No, not the same surface
Salivary gland neoplasms? Possible, there are salivary glands in that area; keep this in differential
The one that this is is pyogenic granuloma: usually red, ulcerated, and bleeds easily
What is this radiographic finding?
**Calcifying Odontogenic Cyst (COC)**
- in the mandible and you can see it well circumscribed radiolucency
- a little bit of blunt root resorption in this area
- No calcifications in this one yet ►so this is still unilocular radiolucency
What is Agranulocytosis?
Etiology?
pts at increase risk of what?
Agranulocytosis
Decrease in the number of cells from the granular cell lineage
(neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils, etc.)
o Decreased production or increased destruction
▪ Some cases are idiopathic, most are drug induced
▪ Anticancer chemotherapeutics ‐ inhibit mitotic division and
maturation of hematopoietic stem cells.
▪ In rare cases, agranulocytosis is a congenital syndrome.
▪ Increase risk of infections