Case Discussion Of Oral Pathosis
Patient Presentation and History1
A 73-year-old female presented with a painful lesion of six weeks duration affecting the right lateral surface of her tongue. Her medical history is significant for the following conditions:
- Osteoarthritis
- Hypertension
- Hypercholesterolemia
Relevant Dental and Oncological History
Clinical Case Description
The patient has a complex oral history, including:
- Biopsy-proven Oral Lichen Planus (OLP).
- Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) of the right lateral tongue, treated with surgery and chemo-radiation therapy (treatment completed two years ago).
- The patient is a non-smoker and non-drinker.
Case Description And Patient History
Identify the pathosis and describe the clinical features.
Marks
3 marks for location 3 marks for description
- Location
- Left lateral tongue
- Ulcer
- NOT RED , therefore no inflammation thus its a chornic uler
Is it a primary or recurrent lesion?
The patient had OSCC, so when would we call it a secondary primary lesion?
- AFTER 5 years
What is the differential diagnosis?
- Recurrent OSCC
- Traumatic Ulcer
- its very close tooth
- shes particularly sensitive because
- radiotherapy: low salivary flow
- susceptible to trauma
What are the relevant clinical investigations?
Biopsy
- When should biopsy be undertaken
- she has super sus symptoms and has lots of points to OSCC so take biopsy right away
Blood tests
Hematinic blood tests
- iron , b12, folate etc
Full blood counts
Diabetes
- Don’t necessarily have to do HbA1c
- for an unknown diabetic the best test would be Fasting Glucose
What is the diagnosis?
- Biopsy was taken and came back as traumatic ulcer
How would you manage this patient?
Benign traumatic ulcer
do all the obvious like check occlusion and interferences
Meds
- Chlorhexidine (highest concentration)
Recall
- longer recall period because the biopsy gave a diagnosis , so 6 weeks
- because we aren’t expecting healing to be quick
Theoretical
- patient comes in after 6 weeks and is not better even after medications
- a rebiopsy is not recommended because it will just make a better wound!
- Tell the patient to continue with the prescribed treatment and recall again in 6 weeks
- it got a bit better , so its a sign to kep doing it
- In the end this was done for 3 months, at the end of the 3 month period the ulcer wasn’t getting worse or better
- At this point the diagnosis should be questioned ex:
- could the pathology be wrong
- Yes
- Therefor biopsy should be repeated
- When biopsy was retaken
- A secondary candida infection was found
- could the pathology be wrong
- At this point the diagnosis should be questioned ex:
Antifungal tablet
- Amphotericin isn’t a good candidate because p/t has a dry mouth
- Nystatin drops are bad because they are sugary and can promote caries
- Miconazole oral gel is a good alternative
- For 6 weeks 4 times a day
- Tell GP about miconazole due to interactions with drugs
Footnotes
-
Original PDF page 1: Injuries Case 1, p.1 ↩