Special Care - Older people: oral medicine Flashcards

(31 cards)

1
Q

What is an haemangioma?

A

malformation of small blood vessels

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2
Q

where are haemangiomas found?

A

anywhere

commonly;
the lip
side of the tongue
under the tongue

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3
Q

What is a fibroepithelial polyp?

A

overgrowth of the mucosa after healing

(looks identical to healthy mucosa just more of it)

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4
Q

What is black hairy tongue?

A

overgrowth of the surface of the tongue which becomes stained.

can have a foul smell

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5
Q

How can we treat black hairy tongue?

A

Clean tongue with a toothbrush

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6
Q

What is atrophic glossitis?

A

An overly smooth/shiny tongue which can become ulcerated.

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7
Q

What causes atrophic glossitis?

A

iron deficiency

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8
Q

What is frictional keratosis?

A

keratinised areas around sites of trauma

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9
Q

what is speckled leukoplakia?

A

a unilateral or bilateral premalignant lesion

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10
Q

Where is speckled leukoplakia found? (2)

A

angle of the mouth

Smokers

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11
Q

When should we refer sublingual keratosis?

A

if it crosses the midline

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12
Q

What denture related problems can older people encounter?

A

traumatic keratosis

denture induced hyperplasia (looks like healthy tissue)

denture stomatitis (painless erythema)

angular chelitis

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13
Q

What are causes of xerostomia?

A

polypharmacy

sjogrens syndorme

radiotherapy

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14
Q

How do we manage dry mouth?

A

Change the medication – difficult

Salivary replacement – saliva orthana, biotene oral balance, bioXtra (don’t use glandosane as its very acidic) the effects are very short lived.

Salivary stimulus – chewing gum, glycerine and lemon

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15
Q

What does lichen planus look like within the mouth

A

white striae on the buccal mucosa, lips, gums and attached gingivae

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16
Q

what are the types of lichen planus?

A

erosive

reticular

17
Q

what drugs can cause lichen planus? (7)

A
NSAIDS 
BB
Diuretics 
oral hypoglycaemic 
statins 
antimalarials 
sulphonamides
18
Q

What are Bisphosphonates taken for?

A
osteoporosis 
malignancies - multiple myeloma, breast, prostate 
padgets disease 
CF 
primary hyperparathyroidism
19
Q

What is the action of Bisphosphonates?

A

inhibits osteoclast formation and migration and therefore inhibits bone turn over

20
Q

What increases the risk of MRONJ?

A

how long Bisphosphonates been used for

extremes of age

concurrent use with corticosteroids

Potency and type of Bisphosphonates

use of Bisphosphonates in treating malignancy

chemo/radio therapy

systemic disease affecting bone turnover

21
Q

What is herpes zoster?

A

unilateral reactivation of the varicella zoster virus on any branch of the trigeminal nerve which leads to shingles

22
Q

what are the symptoms of herpes zoster/shingles?

A

Prodromal pain

followed by a unilateral rash that appears on the dermatome supplied by a branch of the trigeminal nerve

23
Q

What is post herpetic neuralgia?

A

Complication of shingles where there is a constant burning sensation on a dermatomal distribution site once it has resolved

24
Q

Who is at risk of post herpetic neuralgia?

A

those who have had shingles previously

25
How do we treat the pain from post herpetic neuralgia? (3)
gabapentin and carbamazepine transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation antidepressants
26
What is trigeminal neuralgia?
a lancinating pain which commonly affects the maxillary and mandibular branches of the trigeminal nerve. can either be spontaneous or triggered by an activity
27
How do we treat trigeminal neuralgia?
can only manage via carbamazepine
28
Who is affected by burning mouth syndrome?
females those with anxiety and/or depression
29
What causes burning mouth syndrome?
50% no cause 20% psychogenic dry mouth candidiasis haematinic deficiency diabetes
30
Where are common sites of oral cancers?
lateral aspect of tongue ventral tongue buccal corridors
31
What are the physical attributes of oral cancer? (4)
heaped speckled white patches different colour than healthy mucosa