Mucosal Disease In Children Flashcards
Are children more prone to mucosal lesions and why
Children are associated with higher frequency of some intraoral mucosal lesions as there is immunological immaturity.
Give examples of congenital and acquired oral mucosal lesions in childhood
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)
White sponge naevus
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
Fordyce spots
Not a lesion but variation of normal anatomical structure
Ectopic sebaceous glands
Bilateral, common on buccal mucosa
Management: reassurance
Foliate papillae
Pinkish soft nodules
Bilateral, ventral tongue
Made of lymphatic tissue, can be inflamed/hyperplastic
Management: reassurance
Geographic tongue (erythema migrans)
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
Frictional keratosis
Clinical features: pale and translucent or white/dense with rough surface
Histology: epithelial hyperplasia, with thick granular cell layer and kyperorthokeratosis, scattered subepithelial lymphocytes
Traumatic ulcer
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
Mucocele
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
Recurrent aphthous ulcers
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)
Erythema multiforme
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
Orofacial granulomatous
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
Oral lichen planus
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
Mucus membrane pemphigoid
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
Pemphigus
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