Gingival Diseases 1 Flashcards

1
Q

With plaque-induced gingivitis, ScRP will reduce the inflammation. Inflammation associated with ____, ____, _____, ____, _____, or _____ cannot be treated simply by removing plaque.

A
Bacteria
Virus
Fungus
Genetics
Systemics
Trauma
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2
Q

Infective ____ and _____ are gingival lesions of specific bacterial origin that may or may not be accompanied by lesions elsewhere on the body.

A

gingivitis and stomatitis

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3
Q

Which bacteria are commonly involved with infective gingivitis and stomatitis?

A

streptococci

mycobacterium chelonae

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4
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of gingival lesions associated with bacterial origin?

A

fiery red painful ulcerations
asymptomatic chancres
mucous patches
atypical, non-ulcerated, highly inflamed gingivitis

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5
Q

How are lesions of bacterial origin diagnosed?

A

biopsy

microbiologic examination

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6
Q

What are two lesions of viral origin?

A

Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 or 2
Varicella-zoster Virus
(Type 1 usually causes oral manifestations)

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7
Q

What are the symptoms of Primary Herpetic Gingivostomatitis?

A

painful, severe gingivitis with redness
ulcerations with exudate
edema

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8
Q

How does Primary Herpetic Gingivostomatitis manifest?

A
  1. Incubation lasts one week
  2. Vesicles form
  3. Vesicles rupture
  4. Vesicles coalesce and leave fibrin-coated ulcers
  5. Healing within 10-14 days
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9
Q

Herpes virus can stay latent in the _____ ganglion for years.

A

Trigeminal

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10
Q

Primary Herpetic Gingivostomatitis is initially located _____. Recurrent HS is more ______.

A

Everywhere (when primary)

localized (when recurrent)

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11
Q

Recurrent Herpetic infections such as _____ _____ effect the vermillion border and/or the skin adjacent to it.

A

herpes labialis

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12
Q

What percentage of individuals have herpes labialis primary infection?

A

20-40%

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13
Q

What factors will increase liklihood of recurrence of herpetic lesions?

A

trauma
uv light
fever
menstruation

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14
Q

What is herpes zoster?

A

varicella (chicken pox) virus

oral manifestation = small UNILATERAL ulcers on the tongue, palate, and gingiva

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15
Q

Where does herpes zoster virus go latent?

A

the dorsal root ganglion of the 2nd and 3rd branches of the trigeminal ganglion

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16
Q

Candidosis, Linear Gingival Erythema, and Histoplasmosis are all gingival lesions of _______ origin.

A

Fungal

17
Q

True or False: There is oral carriage of C.albicans in 3-48% of healthy adults.

A

True

18
Q

C.albicans is associated with _____ lesions and is frequently isolated from the ______ flora of patients with severe periodontitis.

A

fungal lesions

subgingival flora

19
Q

Candidosis can be of which two forms?

A

Erythematous Candidosis
Pseudomembranous Candidosis
diagnose with culture and microscopic examination of smears

20
Q

What is the common treatment for fungal lesions?

A

chlorhexidine rinse or antifungal pill

21
Q

What is the manifestation of linear gingival erythema?

A

distinct linear erythematous band that is limited to the FREE GINGIVA; lack of bleeding; positive culture test for C.albicans

22
Q

Linear Gingival Erythema is not always associated with ____ but very often it is.

A

HIV

23
Q

______ is a rare granulomatous, fungal disease that is either of the Acute/Chronic Pulmonary or the Disseminated Form.

A

Histoplasmosis

24
Q

Histoplasmosis first appears as nodular or papillary lesions but later becomes the _____ type with pain.

A

ulcerative

25
Q

What is Hereditary Gingival Fibromatosis?

A

diffuse gingival enlargement that is characterized by thick tissue; it appears as a disease entity or part of a syndrome such as mental retardation; common problems include interference with eruption and “biting/chewing on enlarged gingiva”

26
Q

What is the possible mechanism behind Hereditary Gingival Fibromatosis?

A

TGF-beta1 favors the accumulation of ECM

May be a defect located on chromosome 2: “Son of Sevenless-1” gene

27
Q

What are the two types of allergic reactions common in the oral cavity and by which cells are they mediated?

A

Type1: mediated by IgE
TypeIV: mediated by T-cells

28
Q

Allergies to dental restorative material are which type of allergy?

A

type IV - contact allergy (mercury, nickel, gold, etc)

29
Q

Of the two allergy types seen in the oral cavity, which is immediate and which is delayed?

A

Immediate: Type I
Delayed: Type IV

30
Q

Traumatic lesions of the oral cavity can be of ____, ____, or _____ origin.

A

chemical
physical
thermal

31
Q

Incorrect use of caustics by the dentist, chlorhexidine-induced mucosal desquamation, or acetylsalicylic acid burn would cause _______ traumatic lesions.

A

chemical

32
Q

Poor brushing and flossing techniques, frictional keratosis, and gingival laceration would be ______ traumatic lesions.

A

physical

33
Q

Which traumatic lesion type is most commonly seen on the palatal and labial mucosa and could present as painful, erythematous, or vesicular?

A

Thermal Traumatic Injury (burns from hot beverages)

34
Q

What are foreign body reactions?

A

epithelial ulceration that allows entry of foreign material into connective tissue of the gingiva; detected via x-rays or discoloration (amalgam tattoos, toothpicks)