Exam 2; Gingival Diseases 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Gingival inflammation clinically presenting as gingivitis is NOT always due to what

A

accumulation of plaque on the tooth surface

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2
Q

What are two examples of gingival lesions of specific bacterial origin

A

infective gingivitis and stomatitis

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3
Q

How would you diagnose gingival lesions of specific bacterial origin

A

biopsy

microbiologic examination

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4
Q

What are two viruses that can cause gingival lesions

A

herpes simplex 1 and 2

varicella-zoster

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5
Q

What are some symptoms of PHS (primary hepatic gingivostomatitis)

A

painful severe gingivitis with redness
ulcerations with serofibrinous exudate
edema accompanied with stomatitis

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6
Q

What are three characteristics of PHS (primary hepatic gingivostomatitis)

A

incubation period is 1 week
formation of vesicles, which rupture and coalesce and leave fibrin-coated ulcers
healing within 10-14 days

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7
Q

The herpes virus can stay latent where

A

in the trigeminal ganglion

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8
Q

What diseases has the herpes virus been found in

A

gingivitis
NUD/NUP
periodontitis

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9
Q

Describe recurrent herpetic infections; herpes labialis

A

more than once a year
vermillion border and/or the skin adjacent to it
20-40% of individuals with primary infection
trauma. UV light, fever, menstruation

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10
Q

How would you diagnose a recurrent herpetic infection

A

generally considered an aphtous ulceration

ulcerations in the attached gingiva and hard palate

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11
Q

What is the treatment of gingival lesions of viral origin

A

careful plaque removal to limit bacterial superinfection of the ulcerations
systemic uptake of an antiviral medication

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12
Q

This virus causes small ulcers on the tongue, palate, and gingiva; can be unilateral

A

herpes zoster

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13
Q

Where is the herpes zoster virus latent

A

dorsal root ganglion

2nd and 3rd branch of trigeminal ganglion

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14
Q

How would you diagnose herpes zoster infection

A

usually obvious due to unilateral occurrence of the lesions associated with severe pain

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15
Q

What are the symptoms of a herpes zoster infection

A

skin and intraoral lesions

pain and paresthesia

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16
Q

What is the treatment for a herpes zoster infection

A

soft diet
atraumatic removal of plaque
dilute chlorahexidiene rinses
anti-viral drug therapy

17
Q

What are the three most common fungal infections that may affect the oral cavity

A

candidosis
linear gingival erythema
histoplasmosis

18
Q

What happens when infected with candidosis

A

reduced host defense

it is frequently isolated from the sub gingival flora of patients with severe periodontitis

19
Q

What are three symptoms of a candidosis infection

A

painless or slightly sensitive
red and white lesions
lesions can be scraped or separated from the mucosa

20
Q

Who are some patients who are susceptible to candidosis infection

A
cancer patients receiving radiation/chemo
patients using several antibiotics
diabetic
women who develop vaginal candidosis
pregnancy and the use of contraceptives
21
Q

How would you diagnose a candidosis infection

A

culture
microscopic examination of a stained smears
burning tongue

22
Q

What is the treatment for a candidosis infection

A

use of antimycotic/antifungal agents

23
Q

What are the clinical characteristics of gingival candidate infections

A

redness of the attached gingiva

often associated with a granular surface

24
Q

What are the characteristics of linear gingival erythema

A
distinct linear erythematous and limited to the free gingiva
lack of bleeding
C. albicans
50% of HIV associated sites 
immunosuppression
25
Q

What is the treatment for linear gingival erythema

A

does not respond well to improved oral hygiene or to scaling
conventional therapy plus chlorahexadiene rinse
antimycotic therapy if candidia is detected

26
Q

This is a granulomatous disease caused by histoplasma

A

histoplasmosis

27
Q

What are the symptoms of histoplasmosis

A

any area of the oral mucosa; mainly the tongue

nodular or papillary and later may become ulcerative type of lesions with pain

28
Q

How would you diagnose histoplasmosis

A

clinical view and histopathology

systemic manifestations

29
Q

What is the treatment for histoplasmosis

A

systemic antifungal therapy

30
Q

What are two symptoms of hereditary gingival fibromatosis

A

diffuse gingival enlargement

may interfere with or prevent tooth eruption

31
Q

What can cause a diffuse fiery red edematous gingivitis sometimes with ulcerations or whitening

A

allergic reactions

32
Q

What can cause allergies to occur in the oral cavity

A

dental restorative materials

oral hygiene products, chewing gum, and food

33
Q

What can cause chemical traumatic lesions

A

surface etching by various chemical products with toxic properties

34
Q

What can result from a physical traumatic lesion

A

hyperkeratosis; a white leukoplakia-like, frictional keratosis
gingival laceration resulting in gingival recession
traumatic ulcerative gingival lesion

35
Q

What can cause thermal injury

A

minor burns from hot beverages
mostly seen on palatal and labial mucosa
painful erythematous lesions
vesicles may develop

36
Q

What can cause a foreign body reaction

A

epithelial ulceration that allows entry of foreign material into gingival connecting tissue
can be detected via X-rays