Mucosal Disease In Children Flashcards

1
Q

Are children more prone to mucosal lesions and why

A

Children are associated with higher frequency of some intraoral mucosal lesions as there is immunological immaturity.

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2
Q

Give examples of congenital and acquired oral mucosal lesions in childhood

A

Congenital - hereditary (white sponge neavus) or developmental (Fordyce spots, geographic tongue)

Acquired - traumatic (frictional keratosis, traumatic ulcer, mucocele), drug-related( chemotherapy induced stomatitis), chronic inflammation (non-infective) (recurrent aphthous ulcers, erythema multiforme, orofacial granulomatous, oral LP,mucous membrane pemphigoid, pemphigus, epidermolysis bullosa), hyperplastic (pyogenic granuloma, giant cell epulis, vascular deformation, pigmentary changes) neoplastic, infective( HSV-1, VZV, Coxackie virusz HPV, Candida, Streptococcus -scarlet fever)

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3
Q

White sponge naevus

A

Inherited as autosomal dominant condition
Uncommon
Clinical features: white, soft, irregularly thickened, no defined borders, bilateral, genital tissues may be affected as well, can be misdiagnosed with candidiasis

Histopathology: uniform acanthosis, hyperparakeratosis, intracellular oedema, no dysplasia, no inflammation

Management: reassurance

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4
Q

Fordyce spots

A

Not a lesion but variation of normal anatomical structure
Ectopic sebaceous glands
Bilateral, common on buccal mucosa

Management: reassurance

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5
Q

Foliate papillae

A

Pinkish soft nodules
Bilateral, ventral tongue
Made of lymphatic tissue, can be inflamed/hyperplastic

Management: reassurance

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6
Q

Geographic tongue (erythema migrans)

A

Clinical features: dorsum of the tongue, irregular, smooth, red areas of depapilation with sharply-defined edge
Recurrent, migrates

histology: thinning of epithelium at centre, mild hyperplasia at periphery, epithelium infiltrated by neutrophils

Management: reassurance, if symptomatic - exclude haematological deficiencies

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7
Q

Frictional keratosis

A

Clinical features: pale and translucent or white/dense with rough surface

Histology: epithelial hyperplasia, with thick granular cell layer and kyperorthokeratosis, scattered subepithelial lymphocytes

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8
Q

Traumatic ulcer

A

Clinical features: mechanical, thermal or chemical trauma
Inflammation levels and clinical features vary
Yellowish floor of fibrin slough often present

Histology: non specific ulceration, destruction of epithelium, tissue infiltration by neutrophils

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9
Q

Mucocele

A

Clinical features: most commonly on labial mucosa, overlying mucosa is intact and healthy, topically circular, firm or fluctuant and bluish

Histology: damage to duct of salivary gland, mucin and macrophages surrounded by compressed connective tissue, no epithelial lining

Management: reassurance/excision if symptomatic or interferes with oral functions

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10
Q

Recurrent aphthous ulcers

A

Clinical features: idiopathic, but systemic factors known to modulate the severity of disease, onset in childhood but peak in adolescence
Three types: minor, major, herpetiform

Histology: non specific ulceration, initial lymphocytic infiltration, destruction of epithelium, tissue infiltration by neutrophils, dilated vessel

Extra oral involvement should be excluded ( if in GI- coeliac or Crohn’s; if genital/ocular- Bechet’s)

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11
Q

Erythema multiforme

A

Clinical features: mostly HSV related, drug induced, cutaneous erythema or target lesions, ulceration of outer lip with bleeding, crusting, intraoral irregular finrin-covered erosion and erythema

Histology: necrosis of keratinocyes, epithelial infiltration by inflammatory cells, intraepithelial or subepithelial vesiculation

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12
Q

Orofacial granulomatous

A

Clinical features: swelling of the lip, mucosal cobblestoning/nodularity, mucosal tags, gingival hyperplasia, aphthous oral ulcers, in children - more prone to develop Crohn’s

Histology: granulomas containing multinucleated giant cells, lymphoedema

  • Can be related to sarcoidosis and tuberculosis
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13
Q

Oral lichen planus

A

Rare in children

Clinical features: white striae and/or mucosal atrophy, and/or erosions, and/or plaques, desquamative gingivitis in isolation or in combination with above, bilateral lesions

Histology: basal membrane thickening, band-like lymphocytic infiltrate, colloid bodies- apoptotic basal cells

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14
Q

Mucus membrane pemphigoid

A

Rare in children

Clinical features: bullae, sometimes intact, can appear as blood blisters, if reptired- leaves raw ulcer, desquamative gingivitis, conjunctival involvement, cutaneous involvement less prominent than bullous pemphigoid

Histology: separation of full thickness of epithelium from connective tissue, linear deposition of IgG and C3/4 along basal membrane, auto-antibodies bind along the basal membrane in direct immunofluorescence assay, CT infiltrated with inflammatory cells

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15
Q

Pemphigus

A

Rare in children

Clinical features: fragile vesicles/bullae, ruptured vesicles, Nikolsky sign positive, widespread cutaneous involvement

Histology: acantholysis, intraepithelial vesicles, chicken wire deposition of IgG and C3/4 within the epithelium, anti-desmoglein 3 antibodies bind intracellular substance in direct immunofluorescence

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16
Q

Epidermolysis bullosa

A

Rare in children
Subepithelial bullae leading to severe scarring after minimal trauma
Type VII collagen defect
Autosomal recessive

17
Q

Pyogenic granuloma

A

Secondary to chronic irritation

Clinical features: soft, red polypoid swelling, most commonly gingival but not exclusively

Histology: granulation tissue, dilated blood vessels in oedematous connective tissue, dense infiltration by neutrophils
NO granuloma, NO pyogenic bacteria/pus

18
Q

Giant cell epulis (peripheral giant cell granuloma)

A

Clinical features: soft, violaceous swelling, central gingival segments

Histology: subepithelial clusters of giant cells in fibro-vascular tissue

  • Central giant cell granuloma and underlying hyperparathyroidism needs to be excluded!
19
Q

Vascular malformation

A

Clinical features: purple nodular lesion, blanches upon pressure, can be focal or systemic

Histology: capillary: small vessels and vasoformative tissue
Cavernous: large blood filled sinusoids

20
Q

Pigmentary changes

A

Generalized pigmentary changes (post-inflammation, drug-induced) are uncommon in children

Pautz- Jeghers syndrome: heritable, intestinal polyposis, mucocutaneous pigmented lesions appearing during childhood

Addison’s disease: diffused oral pigmentation can be an early sign
Mild acanthosis, melanin in basal layer

21
Q

Viral infectious mucosal changes

A

HSV-1 : perimar herpetic stomatitis, herpes labial is
VZV: chickenpox, zooster ( recurrence)
Coxackie virus: hand-food-mouth disease, herpengina
HPV: warts, primary squamous cell papilloma (rare)
Epstein Barr virus: infectious mononucleosis
Measles virus: measles

22
Q

Fungal infections mucosal diseases

A

Candida:
Pseudomembranous candidosis - -angular cheilitis ( associated with OFG)
- erythematous candidiasis ( rare in children)
-mucocutaneous candidosis (rare, hereditary)

23
Q

Histopathology of HSV, VZV- associated lesions

A
  1. Intranuclear oedema at basal cell layer
  2. Ballooning degeneration - swelling of keratinocyes and loss of attachment
  3. Progressive cell swelling
  4. Rupture of infected cells and release of viral particles to non-infected cells
24
Q

Warts

A

Clinical features: white, pinkish, raised, sessile or pedunculated, often multiple, mainly secondary to self inoculation

Histopathology: papillary processes of hyperplastic epithelium with acanthosis, hyperkeratosis, hyperplastic basal cell layer, connective tissue core, koilocytes often present

25
Q

Pseudomembranous candidosis

A

Clinical features: acute, thick white pseudomembranes of various sizes, erythematous background, often idespread
Diagnosis is clinical but can do culture and sensitivity to treatment

Histopathology: hyperplastic epithelium, parakeratin, superficial necrotic layer, hyphal invasion down to spinous cell layer, neutrophilic infiltration at spinous layer, light subepithelial lymphatic infiltrate