Oral Cavity: Oral Tongue. Oral Cavity: Filiform Papillae (oral tongue)
Oral Cavity and Pharynx
description
Transcript of Oral Cavity and Pharynx
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Oral Cavity and Pharynx
Hannah Lea M. David
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Anatomy of the Lips and Oral Cavity
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Oral Vestibule
• bounded externally by the lips and cheeks and internally by the alveolar processes and teeth
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Lips
• Longer upper lip, shorter lower lip• Connected by the Labial commisures (corners)• Separated from the cheek by the nasolabial fold• Orbicularis oris- muscular foundation of the lips• Blood supply: Superior and inferior labial arteries
(from the Facial artery)• Drained by the facial vein, which communicates
with the orbital vein via the angular vein
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Lips
• Lymphatic drainage- submandibular and submental lymph nodes
• Innervation: upper lip-infraorbital nerve; lower lip- mental nerve
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Cheeks
• Lateral boundaries of the oral vestibule• Buccinator- muscular framework, innervated by
the facial nerve• Buccal fat pad- between the buccinator muscle
and masseter• Excretory duct of the parotid gland- runs through
the buccinator muscle and opens into the mucosa of the cheek opposite the upper second molar
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Masticator muscles
• Masseter• Temporalis muscle• Medial and Lateral pterygoid muscles
• Supplied by the mandibular nerve (3rd div of the trigeminal nerve)
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Teeth
• Deciduous teeth, permanent teeth• 8 per maxilla/ mandible:2 incisors,1 canine, 2 premolars, 3 molars
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Oral Cavity
• Anterior and lateral: alveolar ridge and teeth• Superiorly: Hard and soft palate• Posteriorly: faucial isthmus
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Palate• Hard palate- palatine process of the maxilla anteriorly,
incisive bone, horizontal plates of the palatine bone posteriorly.\
• Soft palate- posterior; palatal muscles (tensor veli palatini, levator veli palatini, palatoglossus muscle)
• Mucosa: contains numerous salivary glands (palatine glands)
• Sensory innervation (mucosa): Greater and lesser palatine nerves
• Blood supply: ascending palatine branch of the facial artery
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Tongue
• Mylohyoid muscle- muscular foundation• Sublingual folds and sublingual papillae-
undersurface of the tongue on both sides of the frenulum
• Apex, body, base• Terminal sulcus-: V-shaped groove which
separates the body from the base
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Tongue
• Mucosa- numerous papillae (filiform, fungiform, vallate, foliate)
• Blood supply (tongue and oral floor): Lingual and sublingual artery
• Drainage: facial vein to the IJV• Lymphatic drainage: ipsilat and contralat
submandibular and submental LN• Motor innervation: Hypoglossal nerve• Sensory innervation (terminal sulcus): lingual nerve,
(base) glossopharyngeal and superior laryngeal nerve
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Diseases of the Lips and Oral Cavity
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Cleft Lip and Palate
• Epidemiology: 1 in 500, one of the most common malformation
• Classification:1. Cleft lip and alveolar ridge2. Cleft lip, alveolar ridge, and palate and isolated
cleft palate3. Symptoms: hypernasal speech (due to incomplete
closure of the nasopharynx), recurrent middle ear effusions and inflammatioons, septal deviations
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• Pathogenesis: developmental anomaly of the embryonic head (genetic, viral infections, placental oxygen deficiency, intrauterine bleeding, exposure to ionizing radiation)
• Diagnosis should include palaption of the hard palate
• Tx: surgery
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Dermoid cyst of the oral floor
• Presents with submental swelling, tense bulging of the entire anterior and lateral oral floor
• DDx: Dysgenetic salivary gland cyst• May also involve the tongue and mandible
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Transverse facial cleft
• Failure of the fusion of the maxillary and mandibular processes or failure of the buccal membrane to regress due to fusion of the myoblasts
• Bilateral extension of the oral fissure• Aassociated with facial dysplasia and auricular
dystropia
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Inflammations of the Lips and Oral Cavity
Herpes simplex Virus• Usually HSV type 1• MOT: Contact or droplet infection• Symptoms:Primary infection- childhood, herpetic gingivostomatitis
( bullae/vesicles on the oral mucosa preceded by fever and lethargy accompanied by regional lymphadenitis)
Reactivation- in response to physical exertion, fever, Uv radiation, stress, pregnancy, herpes labialism
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• SOP: Perioral region• Dx: History, clinical exam, Tzanck smear• Complications: secondary bacterial
superinfection by Staphylococcus aureus (Herpes impetiginatus), Exudative Erythema multiforme, Pospischill- Feyrter aphthoid, herpetic meningoenecephalitis
• Tx: acyclovir
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Varicella Zoster Virus
• Chickenpox(primary), Zoster (reinfection)• Symptoms: Chickenpox- papulovesicular
lesions esp on the head and trunk. Zoster- segmental distribution associated with neuropathic pain
• Tx: acyclovir/ famciclovir
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Herpangina
• Causes: Group a coxsackie virus, Group B CV, Retrovirus, Echovirus
• Symptoms: Fever, malaise, headache, muscle pain, bullous eruptions surrounded by red halo on the oral mucosa particularly on the anterior faucial pillars, uvula and palatine tonsils
• DDx: Gingivostomatitis• Tx: Symptomatic
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Recurrent aphthous stomatitis
• Inflammatory shallow ulcers with slightly raised erythematous borders
• Tx: Symptomatic
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Oral hairy leukoplakia
• Pathognomonic of HIV infection• Believed to be caused by EBV• Patchy, whitish, slightly raised lesions
predominantly on the border of the tongue• Painless• Tx: topical Vit A and/or podophyllin
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Oral floor Abscess
• Usu. originates from the lower molars, mucosal injuries in the oral floor
• Edematous expansion with a firm erythematous swelling in the submental to submandibular areas
• Difficulty swallowing and speaking• High fever• May progress to ARDS or mediastinitis• Dx: US, CT to define the extent• Tx: Incision and drainage, antibiotic treatment
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Candidiasis
• Impaired immune sytem• Whitish, firmly adherent plaques that can be
scraped from the mucosa, leaving an erythematous bleeding surface
• Tx: Nystatin solution or amphotericin B lozenges
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Lesions of the tongue
• Hunter’s glossitis- atrophic inflammatory condition of the tongue base, acconpanying feature of PA, s/s: burning of the tongue, dry mouth, altered sense of taste, smooth shiny appearance of the tongue with partial atrophy of the filiform papillae
• Fissured tongue- numerous furrows on the dorsal surface, maybe a sign of Melkersson-Rosenthal Synd
• Angioedema- swelling of the face, lips, tongue and laryynx due to a pronounced vascular reaction usu in anaphylactic or anaphylactoid reactions
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• Geographic tongue- areas of desquamation of the filiform papillae on the dorsal surface with occ burning sensation
• Black hairy tongue- hyperkeratosis of the filiform papillae due to failuure of desquamation of the cornified layers
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ATROPHIC GLOSSITIS FISSURED TONGUE
ANGIOEDEMA GEOGRAPHIC TONGUE BLACK HAIRY TONGUE
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Benign Tumors
• Epithelial or mesenchymal• Papilloma, pleomorphic adenoma, fibroma,
lipoma, rhabdomyomas, leiomyomas, chondromas
• Tx: surgical
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Precancerous Lesions
• Leukoplakia- asymptomatic, associated with denture pressure or alcohol/nicotine abuse, always investigated by biopsy, tx: complete surgical removal
• Bowen’s disease- chronic inflam disease caused by intraepidermal carcinomam
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Malignant tumors (Lips)
• Squamous cell carcinoma – usually affects the lower lip, associated with pipe smoking and sun exposure
• Intractable ulcerations in the vermillion border of the lips or large exophytic lesions, tx: surgical removal
• Basal cell Ca- involves the vermillion border of the lip only by secondary spread
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Malignant Tumors (Oral cavity)
• Squamous cell Ca- smoking and alcohol abuse, presents with painful swallowing, blood tinged saliva, fetid breath odor, or asymptomatic
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Pharynx
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Pharynx
• Tubular, fibromuscular space extending from the skull base to the inlet of the esophagus
• Consists of: nasopharynx, oropharynx, hypopharynx
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Nasopharynx
• Highest part of the pharynx• From the bony skull bbase to an imaginary
horizontal line at the level of the velum• Communicates with the nasal cavity via the
choanae and middle ear via the orifice of the eustachian tube
• (S) floor of the sphenoid sinus and pharyngeal roof , (P) first cervical vertebra
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Oropharynx
• Communicates with oral cavity via the faucial isthmus
• Extends inferiorly from the lowest border of the nasopharynx to the upper margin of the epiglottis
• (A) tongue base, (P) C2, C3, (L) faucial pillars
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Hypopharynx
• Lowest segment• From the superior border of the epiglottis to
the inf border of the cricoid catilage• (P) C3-C6, (A) back of the larynx