Description:
Oral Medicine and Pathology at a Glance, 2nd Edition offers a comprehensive overview of essential aspects of oral medicine and pathology, with an emphasis on oral health care provision in general practice.
Table of contents:
Preface vii
About the companion website
1 Examination of extraoral tissues 2
Head and neck 3
Cranial nerves 3
Limbs 3
2 Examination of mouth, jaws, temporomandibular region and salivary glands 4
Mouth 5
Jaws 5
Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) 5
Salivary glands 5
3 Investigations: Histopathology 6
Mucosal biopsy 7
Brush biopsy 7
Labial salivary gland biopsy 7
4 Investigations: Microbiology 8
5 Investigations: Imaging 10
6 Investigations: Blood tests 12
Referring a patient for specialist opinion 12
7 Anatomical variants and developmental anomalies 14
Fordyce spots (“Fordyce granules”) 15
Fissured tongue (scrotal or plicated tongue) 15
Stafne cyst or bone cavity 15
Torus palatinus 15
Torus mandibularis 15
Varicosities 15
8 Blisters 16
Angina bullosa hemorrhagica (localized oral purpura; traumatic oral hemophlyctenosis) 17
9 Blisters, infections: Herpes simplex virus 18
Herpes simplex 18
Recurrent herpes labialis 19
Recurrent intraoral herpes 19
10 Blisters infections: Varicella zoster virus 20
Chickenpox (varicella) 21
Zoster (shingles) 21
11 Blisters, skin diseases: Pemphigus 22
Pemphigus 23
12 Blisters, skin diseases: Pemphigoid 24
13 Pigmented lesions 26
Superficial discoloration 26
Hairy tongue (black hairy tongue; lingua villosa nigra) 27
14 Pigmented lesions: Ethnic pigmentation and tattoos 28
Ethnic pigmentation 29
Foreign body tattoos 29
15 Pigmented lesions: Melanotic macule 30
16 Pigmented lesions: Nevus and others 31
Adenocorticotrophic hormone effects (ACTH) 31
17 Pigmented lesions: Malignant melanoma 32
18 Red and purple lesions 34
Purpura 34
19 Red and purple lesions: Desquamative gingivitis, mucositis 35
Desquamative gingivitis 35
Mucositis 35
20 Red and purple lesions: Erythematous candidosis 36
Acute candidosis 36
Chronic candidosis 37
Denture-related stomatitis (denture sore mouth; chronic atrophic candidosis) 37
Angular stomatitis (angular cheilitis; perleche) 37
Median rhomboid glossitis (central papillary atrophy of the tongue) 37
21 Red and purple lesions: Angiomas 38
Hemangioma 38
Venous lake (venous varix; senile hemangioma of lip) 38
Lymphangioma 38
22 Red and purple lesions: Proliferative vascular lesions, Kaposi sarcoma 39
Proliferative vascular lesions 39
Kaposi sarcoma 39
23 Red and purple lesions: Erythroplakia 40
Erythroplakia (erythroplasia) 40
24 Red and purple lesions: Erythema migrans (lingual erythema migrans; benign migratory glossitis; geographical tongue; continental tongue) 41
25 Swellings: Hereditary conditions, drug-induced swellings 42
Hereditary gingival fibromatosis (HGF) 43
C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency (hereditary angioedema) 43
Drug-induced gingival swelling 43
26 Swellings: Infections, human papilloma virus 44
Papilloma 44
Warts (verrucae) 45
Multifocal epithelial hyperplasia (Heck disease) 45
Koilocytic dysplasia 45
HPV and oral cancer 45
27 Swellings: Granulomatous conditions 46
Sarcoidosis 46
Crohn disease and orofacial granulomatosis 46
28 Swellings: Reactive lesions 48
Denture-induced hyperplasia (epulis fissuratum) 49
Fibroepithelial polyp (fibrous lump) 49
Fibroma 49
Giant cell epulis (peripheral giant cell granuloma) 49
Pyogenic granuloma 49
29 Swellings: Malignant neoplasms, oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) 50
30 Swellings: Malignant neoplasms, lymphoma, metastatic neoplasms 52
Lymphomas 53
Metastatic oral neoplasms 53
31 Ulcers and erosions: Local causes, drug-induced ulcers 54
Local causes 54
Eosinophilic ulcer (traumatic eosinophilic granuloma; traumatic ulcerative granulomatous disease) 54
Drug-induced ulcers (stomatitis medicamentosa) 55
32 Ulcers and erosions: Aphthae 56
33 Ulcers and erosions: Aphthous-like ulcers 58
Behçet syndrome (BS, Behçet disease) 59
34 Ulcers and erosions: Blood diseases, gastrointestinal disorders 60
Blood diseases 60
Leukemias 60
Gastrointestinal disorders 61
Celiac disease (gluten sensitive enteropathy) 61
35 Ulcers and erosions: Infections 62
Hand, foot and mouth disease (HFM; vesicular stomatitis with exanthem) 62
Herpangina 62
Bacterial infections 63
Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis (Vincent disease; acute ulcerative gingivitis, AUG, ANG, ANUG) 63
Syphilis 63
Gonorrhea 63
Tuberculosis 63
36 Ulcers and erosions: Erythema multiforme, toxic epidermal necrolysis and Stevens-Johnson syndrome 64
Erythema multiforme 65
Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN, Lyell syndrome) and Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) 65
37 White lesions: Candidosis (candidiasis) 66
Acute pseudomembranous candidosis 66
Chronic hyperplastic candidosis (Candidal leukoplakia) 67
Chronic mucocutaneous candidosis (CMC) 67
38 White lesions: Keratosis, leukoplakia 68
Tobacco-related keratosis 69
Leukoplakia 69
39 White lesions: Hairy leukoplakia, lichen planus 70
Hairy leukoplakia 70
Lichen planus (LP) and lichenoid reactions 71
40 Salivary conditions: Salivary swelling and salivary excess 72
Salivary swelling 73
Saliva excess (sialorrhea, hypersialia, hypersalivation, ptyalism) and drooling 73
41 Salivary conditions: Dry mouth 74
42 Salivary conditions: Sjögren syndrome 76
43 Salivary conditions: Sialolithiasis, sialadenitis 78
Sialolithiasis 78
Sialadenitis 78
Sialadenitis: Acute viral (mumps) 78
Sialadenitis: Acute bacterial ascending 79
Sialadenitis: Chronic bacterial 79
Sialadenitis: Recurrent parotitis of childhood 79
44 Salivary conditions: Neoplasms 80
Benign neoplasms (adenomas) 81
Malignant neoplasms 81
45 Salivary conditions: Mucoceles, sialosis 82
Mucoceles (mucous cyst; mucus extravasation phenomenon; myxoid cyst) 83
Sialosis (sialadenosis) 83
46 Neck swelling 84
Discrete swellings in the neck 85
Cervical lymphadenopathy 85
Unexplained lymphadenopathy 85
Diffuse swelling of the neck 85
47 Neck swelling: Cervical lymphadenopathy in generalized lymphadenopathy 86
Systemic infections 87
Inflammatory disorders (not known to be infective) 87
Neoplastic causes 87
Drugs 87
Others 87
48 Neurological conditions: Bell palsy, and trigeminal sensory loss 88
Bell palsy 89
Trigeminal sensory loss 89
49 Neurological conditions and pain: Local, referred and vascular 90
Local causes of orofacial pain 90
Referred causes of orofacial pain 91
Vascular causes of orofacial pain 91
50 Neurological conditions and pain: Trigeminal neuralgia 92
Trigeminal neuralgia 93
51 Neurological conditions and pain: Psychogenic (idiopathic facial pain, idiopathic odontalgia and burning mouth syndrome (oral dysesthesia)) 94
Persistent idiopathic, or unexplained (atypical) facial pain (IFP) 95
Burning mouth “syndrome” (BMS, glossopyrosis, glossodynia, oral dysesthesia, scalded mouth syndrome, or stomatodynia) 95
52 Jaw conditions: Temporomandibular pain-dysfunction 96
Temporomandibular joint pain-dysfunction syndrome (TMPD), myofascial pain dysfunction (MFD), facial arthromyalgia (FAM), mandibular dysfunction, or mandibular stress syndrome 97
53 Jaw bone conditions: Radiolucencies and radiopacities 98
Radiolucencies 98
Radiopacities 99
Mixed radiolucent and radiopaque lesions 99
54 Jaw bone conditions: Odontogenic diseases and cysts 100
Odontogenic infections 101
Odontogenic cysts 101
55 Jaw bone conditions: Odontogenic tumors 102
Benign odontogenic tumors 102
Malignant odontogenic tumors 103
56 Jaw conditions: Bone disorders 104
Non-neoplastic diseases 105
Neoplastic disorders 105
57 Jaw bone conditions: Fibro-osseous lesions 106
Osseous dysplasia, cemento-osseous dysplasia (COD), periapical cemental or cemento-osseous dysplasia (PCD) 107
Cherubism 107
Fibrous dysplasia 107
Hypercementosis 107
Ossifying fibroma (cemento-ossifying fibroma) 107
Paget disease of bone 107
58 Maxillary sinus conditions 108
Rhinosinusitis (sinusitis) 109
Neoplasms 109
59 Oral malodor 110
60 Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and AIDS 112
Index 115
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