Sandbox:Affan

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Muhammad Affan M.D.[2]

Surface oral lesions
Oral lesions Appearance Associated conditions Location Microscopic Image
White Lesions Leukoedema
  • White or whitish grey edematous lesion
  • Diffuse or patchy
  • Variant of normal oral mucosa
  • Buccal and labial oral mucosa
  • Intracellular edema or vacuolization of Malpighian cells.
Fordyce granules
  • White or yellow discrete papules
  • Symmetrically distributed
  • Variant of normal oral mucosa
  • Buccal mucosa
  • Vermillion border of the lips
  • Similar to normal sebaceous glands of skin
  • Lacks hair follicles and almost always lack ductal communication with surface.
Benign migratoy glossitis
  • Red patches with white distinct border
  • Map like appearance
  • Psoriasis
  • Diabetes
  • Reiter's syndrome
  • Medications such as Oral contraceptive pills and lithium carbonate
  • Dorsal/Lateral surface of the tongue
  • Acanthosis with neutrophils throughout epithelium and surface
  • Microabscesses, plus inflammatory infiltrate in lamina propria
  • Resembles psoriasis
Hairy tongue
  • Elongated filliform lingual papillae
  • Carpet like appearance
  • Xerostomia
  • Medications such as anti-psychotics
  • HIV
  • Amyotropic lateral sclerosis
  • Dorsum of the tongue
  • Marked elongation and hyperparakeratosis of the filiform papillae
Hairy leukoplakia

White patches

  • Corrugated in appearance
  • Hairy, hair-like growths
  • Permanent
  • Buccal mucosa
  • Lateral surface of the tongue
  • Floor of the mouth
  • Palate
  • Hyperkeratotic oral mucosa due to piling of keratotic squamous epithelium
  • Cowdry type A intranuclear inclusions
  • Balloon cells with margination of chromatin
White sponge nevus
  • White patches of tissue (nevi)
  • Singular or multiple
  • Thickened, velvety, sponge-like appearance
  • Heriditarary
  • Buccal mucosa
  • Parakeratosis, acanthosis
  • Extensive vacuolation
  • Dyskeratotic cells exhibit dense peri and paranuclear eosinophilic condensations
  • Abundant Odland bodies
Lichen Planus
  • Reticular or papular lace like white lesions
  • Multiple, Painful
  • Autoimmune disorders disorders
  • Posterior buccal mucosa
  • Gingival margin
  • Hyperkeratosis and acanthosis
  • Granular cell layer, sawtoothing of rete pegs, bandlike chronic inflammatory infiltrate
  • Civatte bodies
  • Artifactual cleft formation
  • No atypia
Frictional hyperkeratosis
  • White shaggy plaques
  • Could be easily peeled without any pain leaving normal mucosa
  • Bite trauma
  • Grinding of the teeth
  • Buccal mucosa
  • Limited to line of dental occlusion
  • Hyperkeratinization and acanthosis
  • Smooth, corrugated, or ragged, epthelial surfac with multiple keratin projections
Leukoplakia
  • White or grayish in patches that can't be wiped away
  • Irregular or flat-textured
  • Thickened or hardened in areas
  • Along with raised, red lesions (speckled leukoplakia or erythroplakia), which are more likely to show precancerous changes
  • Smoking
  • Soft palate
  • Floor of mouth
  • Ventral surface of tongue and the retromolar area
  • Varies histologically from acanthosis, hyperkeratosis, dysplasia or carcinoma in situ
  • Carcinoma in situ is associated with lymphocytes and macrophages
Erythroplakia
  • Fiery red patch
    • Smooth, velvety, granular or nodular lesions
  • Highest risk of malignant transformation
  • Soft palate
  • Floor of mouth
  • Ventral surface of tongue and the retromolar area
  • Thin atrophic epithelium with prominent subepithelial vascularity and inflammation.
  • Almost all erythroplakic lesions contain dysplastic cells
Oral lesions Appearance Associated conditions Location Microscopic Image
Pigmented lesions
  • Ephelis
  • Flat red or light brown spots
  • 3–10 mm in diameter
  • Poorly defined and may merge into large patches
  • Sun exposed skin
  • Predominant in outer lips
  • Mild hyperpigmentation of basal keratinocytes, normal architecture
  • Oral melanocytic macule
  • Focal pigmented brown lesions similar to ephelides
  • Flat and mostly smaller than 1 cm
  • Characterised by a focal increase in melanin production
  • Idiopathic
  • Gingiva, with the buccal mucosa and palate
  • No atypia.
  • Melanin pigmentation tends to be present in significant amounts in the basal-cell layer.
  • Oral melanoacanthoma
  • Proliferation of benign dendritic melanocytes scattered throughout the epithelium, acanthosis and spongiosis
  • Smoker's melanosis
  • Increased melanin pigmentation is noted in the basal cell layer of the epithelium.
  • Melanin incontinence may also be noted in the underlying lamina propria
  • Melanoma
  • Varies from dark brown to blue-black
  • Mucosa-colored and white lesions are occasionally noted
  • Erythema is observed when the lesions are inflamed.
  • Idiopathic
  • 80% cases involve palate and maxillary gingiva
  • Buccal mucosa, mandibular gingiva, and tongue lesions
  • Acral lentiginous
  • Malignant cells often nest or cluster in groups in an organoid fashion
  • Kaposi sarcoma
  • HIV and HHV-8.
  • Hard palate is most frequently affected, followed by the gums
  • Addison's disease
  • Hyperparakeratinized areas showing acanthosis, spongiosis, exocytosis, vacuolar degeneration,
  • Substantial deposition of melanin in all epithelial layers
  • Melanocytic hyperplasia
  • Dendritic melanocytes in all epithelial layers.
  • Peutz jeghers syndrome

Perioral

  • Freckling of the skin around lips and vermillionzone of the lips.

Intraorally

  • Neurofibromatosis
  • Proliferation of all elements of peripheral nerves
  • Schwann cells with wire like collagen fibrils,fibroblasts and collagen
  • Perineurial cells in plexiform types, mitotic figures are rare
  • Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia
  • Orofacial deformity
  • Dental disorders
  • Bone pains
  • Compromised oral health
  • Predominantly involves musculo-skeletal defects of oral cavity
  • Gingiva
  • Curvilinear trabeculae of metaplastic woven bone in hypocellular, fibroblastic stroma
  • Amalgam tattoo
  • Pigmented fragments of metal within connective tissue
  • A scattered arrangement of black or dark brown granules
  • Large particles may be surrounded by chronically inflamed fibrous tissue
Oral lesions Appearance Associated conditions Location Microscopic Image
Vesicular/

Ulcerative

Infections Herpes simplex virusinfections

Herpetic gingivostomatitis

  • Painful ulcers covered by a yellowish pseudomembrane
  • Ulcers that may coalesce to form bigger lesions
  • Self limiting after 7 days
  • HSV 1 Infection
  • Keratinized and non-keratinized mucosa.
  • Intra and intercellular edema (acantholysis)
  • Intranuclear inclusions
  • Multinucleate polykaryons (giant cells)
Herpes zoster
  • Clustered small ulcers with characteristic unilateral pattern
  • Keratinocytes are multinucleated, acantholytic with distinct nuclear inclusions, found initially in follicular epithelium
  • Late epidermal necrosis or full-thickness acantholysis
  • Dermal nerve twigs may exhibit a perineural infiltrate of lymphocytes and neutrophils, sometimes associated with intraneural involvement
  • Schwann cell hypertrophy and frank neural necrosis are occasionally encountered
Hand foot mouth disease
  • Irregularly shaped shallow ulcers with yellow-grey base and hyperemic margin.
  • Coxsackievirus
  • Vesicular lesions will demonstrate loose strands of fibrin, lymphocytes and neutrophils in the vesicular fluid.
  • The presence of acantholysis in the epidermis and perivascular infiltration of leukocytes is seen in hand foot and mouth disease.
  • The absence of intracelluar inclusion bodies differentiates it from the herpes simplex infection.
Infectious mononucliosis
  • Epstein-Barr virus infection
  • Kissing's Disease
  • Reactive lymphoid hyperplasia
  • Extensive immunoblastic proliferation in sheets and nodules, marked atypia resembling Reed-Sternberg cells
Erosive lichen planus
Pseudomembranous candidiasis
  • Known as thrush.
  • Usually asymptomatic.
  • Confluent white wipeable plaques resembling curdled milk
  • Superficially the plaques can be wiped off and the underlying mucosa often exhibits an erythematous appearance.
  • Chronic medications
  • Immuno-suppressive conditions
  • Wet mount examination with 10% KOH or saline demonstrates hyphae, pseudohyphae, and blastospores.
Histoplasmosis
  • Ohio and Mississippi river valleys
Blastomycosis
  • Mississippi, Missouri and Ohio River valleys and the Great lakes region.
  • Ginguve
  • Mostly Pulmonary Nodules

Classic appearance on modified Wright's stain

Coccidiodomycosis
  • Dust exposure in endemic areas, due to occupational activities agricultural or construction workers
  • Military personnel training in endemic areas
  • Construction work, and model airplane competitions
  • Natural disasters such as earthquakes and windstorms
  • Tongue

It is a dimorphic fungus and on microscopy, the following can be seen

Autoimmune conditions Pemphigus vulgaris
  • Intraepithelial blister with acantholysis and chronic inflammation
Mucous membrane pemphigoid (Cicatricial pemphigoid)
  • Subepidermal vesicle contains edema fluid, fibrin and variable inflammatory cells
  • Perivascular lymphohistiocytic infiltrate, plasma cells and neutrophils
  • Fewer eosinophils than generalized bullous pemphigoid
  • Conjunctival squamous metaplasia with foci of hyperkeratosis and parakeratosis, accompanied by goblet cell depletion; conjunctival vesicles or bulla are rare
Aphthous ulcer
  • Shallow, round to oval ulcer with white or yellow pseudomembrane surrounded by halo
  • In chronic ulcer grey membrane may replace the yellow pseudomembrane
  • SLE
  • IBD
  • Appear on the non-keratinizing epithelial surfaces in the mouth.
  • Except the attached gingiva, the hard palate and the dorsum of the tongue
Erythema multiforme
  • Infections e.g. EBV, CMV herpes, and mycoplasma etc
  • Drugs e.g. sulfonamides, anticonvulsants etc
  • Subepidermal bullae with basement membrane in bullae roof due to dermal edema
  • Severe dermal inflammatory infiltrate (includes lymphocytes, histiocytes)
  • Eosinophils may be present, but neutrophils are sparse or absent
  • Overlying epidermis often demonstrates liquefactive necrosis and degeneration, dyskeratotic keratinocytes
  • May also have dermoepidermal bullae with basal lamina at floor of bullae
  • Variable epidermal spongiosis and eosinophils
  • No leukocytoclasis, no microabscesses, no festooning of dermal papillae
Sjogren's Syndrome

Affects salivary and lacrimal glands

  • Crohn's diseae
  • Extensive lymphoid infiltrate with germinal centers, often interstitial fibrosis and acinar atrophy.
Bullous pemphigoid
  • Psoriasis
  • Parkinson's disease
  • Dementia
  • Certain drugs e.g. spironolactone, loop diuretics and neuroleptics
  • Malignancies e.g. breast cancer
Idiopathic conditions Allergic contact stomatitis
Irritant contact stomatitis

Just to make it easier to scroll down I made this heading Don't Panic

Soft tissue oral lesions
Reactive lesions Appearance Associated conditions Location Microscopic Image
Inflammatory papillary hyperplasia
  • Benign lesion characterized by hyperemic mucosa
  • One or more bulbous or nodular growth measuring less than 2 mm
  • Palatal torus
  • Candida albicans infections
  • Use of upper dentures
  • smoking
  • poor oral condition
  • Hard palate
  • Papillary projections
  • Stratified squamous epithelium
  • Edematous connective tissue
  • Chronic inflammatory infiltrate
Fibrous hyperplasia
  • Presents as a yellowish–white or mucosal colored, sessile, smooth-surfaced, asymptomatic, soft nodule.
  • The surface may be hyperkeratotic or ulcerated, owing to repeated trauma.
  • Diphenylhydantoin ingestion
  • Cyclosporine A
  • Nifedipine
  • The most common intraoral site is along the occlusal line of the buccal mucosa
  • It also affects the lower lip, tongue, hard palate and edentulous alveolar ridge
  • Unencapsulated, solid, nodular mass of dense and sometimes hyalinized fibrous connective tissue.
  • The surface epithelium is usually atrophic,
  • Show signs of continued trauma, such as, excess keratin, intracellular edema of the superficial layers or traumatic ulceration
Mucocele
Necrotizing sialometaplasia
Periodontal abscess
Periapical abscess
Tumors Appearance Associated conditions Locations Microscopic Image
Epithelial tumors Squamous cell carcinoma
Oral epithelial dysplasia
Proliferative verrucous leukoplakia
Papillomas Condyloma acuminatum
Verrucous vulgaris
Multifocal epithelial hyperplasia
Salivary type tumors Mucoepidermoid carcinoma
Pleomorphic adenoma
Soft tissue and Neural tumors Granular cell tumor
Rhabdomyoma
Lymphangioma
Hemangioma
Schwannoma
Neurofibroma
Kaposi sarcoma
Myofibroblastic sarcoma
Hematolymphoid tumors CD-30 positive lymphoproliferative disorder
Plasmablastic lymphoma
Langerhan cell histiocytosis
Extramedullary myeloid sarcoma
Tumors of uncertain histiogenesis Congenital granular cell epulis
  • Solitary, somewhat pedunculated fibroma like lesion attached to the alveolar ridge near the midline
  • Gum pads
  • Sheets of closely packed large, rounded polygonal cells with abundant granular, eosinophilic cytoplasm and a single basophilic nucleus and scant fibrous stroma
  • Stained diffusely but strongly for vimentin and neuron specific esolase (NSE) pointing towards mesenchymal cell or nerve tissue as probable source of origin and negative for smooth muscle actin (SMA) and S-100
Ectomesenchymal chondromyxoid tumor
  • Asymptomatic slow growing solitary nodule nodule in the anterior dorsal tongue
  • Anterior part of the tongue
Cysts Oral Lymphoepithelial cyst (Branchial cleft cyst)
  • Painless
  • White to yellow
  • Soft to firm
  • Less than 1 cm
  • HIV
  • Floor of the mouth
  • Laterla margin of the tongue
Cystic cavity lined with:
  • Stratified squamous and/or pseudostratified columnar epithelium cells containing desquamative epithelial and inflammatory cells
Oral Epidermoid cyst
  • Commonly Midline or sublingual region of the floor of the mouth
  • Raely buccal mucosa
Thyroglossal tract cyst
Nasolabial cyst ( Klestadt cyst)
  • Non-tender distension of the nasolabial fold due to swelling and elevation of the lateral nasal ala
  • It may extend inferiorly into labial sulcus or laterally widening the nasal vestibule.
  • Elevation of the bridge of the nose
  • nasal alar and sublabial region
  • Anterior maxillary region
  • Nonodontogenic
  • Submusosal
  • Extraosseous

Cyst lined with:

  • Pseudo-stratified columnar epithelium with intermittent occurrence of goblet like mucin producing cells and also cuboidal epithelial lining
  • Stroma consisiting of non-specific chronic inflammatory infiltrate and cholesterol cleft formation

References