Managing Lichen Planus Flashcards

1
Q

Contributing factors to LP

A
  • idiopathic
  • may be due to medication, ie: anti-hypertensive
  • amalgam restoration
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2
Q

Common medication related to LP

A
  • ACE inhibitors
  • Beta- adrenergic blockers
  • Diuretics - Bendroflumethiazide, Frusemide
  • NSAIDs
  • DMARDs-
    Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, ie: Penicillamine, Gold, Sulphasalazine

Rare
- phenothiazines

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3
Q

How does Lichenoid drug reaction present?

A
  • more often widespread lesions
  • often bilateral and mirrored
  • poorly responsive to standard steroid tx
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4
Q

what to consider when giving drug

A
  • benefit of drug
  • risk of stopping drug
  • discomfort from symptoms
  • degree of tx needed
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5
Q

Risk/ benefit analysis

A
  • does the benefit of stopping the drug > risk to pt’s health
  • mild lichen symptoms: unlikely
  • significant symptoms: where maximum topical/ systemic tx is needed to control lichen symptoms
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6
Q

How to manage medication change?

A
  • discuss with pt’s GP
  • maybe medicine no longer needed
  • easy change of medication , ie: ACE inhibitor to AT2 blocker; same reactions to BP
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7
Q

Amalgam related lesions

A
  • there is lichenoid change when teeth are in occlusion
  • always check during oral examination
  • if unsure what trigger LP; ie: amalgam, mercury
  • do a patch test to amalgam/ mercury
  • pragmatic approach is to remove restoration, but not always sensible/ practical
  • might respond when remove/ not; might cause more damage to tooth, hence patch test first
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8
Q

Managing amalgam related lesion

A

If not symptomatic, do nothing
- potentially malignant lesion? low malignant tranformative risk
- replacing restoration may cause increase tooth damage
- cost to pt -> DPB will fund composite
- amalgam should only be changed if direct contact with lichenoid reactions

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9
Q

Amalgam should be replaced with?

A
  • composite
  • glass
  • gold: low palladium alloy (PMA)
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10
Q

What to be aware of when removing amalgam?

A
  • rubber dam
  • high volume suction
  • PPI- personal protection equipment
  • avoid doing during pregnancy
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11
Q

Lichen planus Management

A
  1. Removal of cause
    - medicines
    - dental restorations, ie: amalgam
  2. Biopsy
    - if not clear, then biopsy
    - useful in asymptomatic lesions to ahve an establish diagnosis
  3. Blood test
    - more symptomatic if pt is haematinics deficiency
    - FBC
    - if lupus suspected, need autoantibody screen (ANA, Ro, dsDNA) will be sensible
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12
Q

How to manage mild intermittent lesions

A
  1. Topical OTC lesions
    - Chlorhexidine MW
    - Benzdamine MW
  2. Avoid SLS containing toothpaste- driver for gingival lesions
    - Sensodyne Pronamel
    - Kingfisher
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13
Q

Manage persisting symptomatic lesions (SDCEP guidance)

A

Primary care setting
- Topical steroids (oral ulcers)
1. Beclomethasone MDI 0.5mg/ puff - 2 puffs 2-3 times daily

  1. Bethamethasone MW rinse- 1mg/ 10ml/ 2 mins/ twice daily
  • pt should restart medication if becomes symptomatic

Hospital setting (specialist)
- higher strength topical steroids- puffer/ rinse
- skin steroid cream - Clobetasol
- can be applied in a veneer form for gingival lesion
- Topical tacrolimus -> ointment/ MW (more active ingredient to active lesions)
- Hydroxychloroquine (effective immune modulator for both cutaneous and oral LP)
- systemic immunemodulators, ie: Azathioprine, Mycophenolate

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14
Q

Gingival veneer for topical steroid

A

gel form Synalar

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15
Q

Graft vs Host disease

A
  • due to bone transplant
  • give lesions similar to lichenoid lesions
  • histologically similar to LP, lymphocytic and change in keratinisation and prickle cell layers
  • ask if pt has organ transplant recently
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16
Q

Lupus erythematosis

A
  • if palatal lesions are found, lupus must always be considered
  • associated with systemic autoantibodies
17
Q

Lupus erythematosis histology

A
  • infiltration of lymphocytes far from basement membrane
18
Q

Lichen- like lesions

A

Important!!
- underlying disease needs consideration
- asymptomatic oral disease
- GvHD common after stem-cell transplant/ BMT

Lupus lesions
- if ONLY in mouth, then discoid lupus, no autoantibodies
- if mouth and elsewhere, then systemic lupus, ANA/ Ro/ dsDNA antibodies in blood

19
Q

If ONLY oral symptoms

A
  • treat symptomatically as LP
  • liaise with physician regarding oral lesions
  • may persist even if systmeic disease is controlled
20
Q

Benzydamine/ Difflam spray

A
  • 0.15 %
  • topical analgesics
  • once every 1.5 hours