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Oral Cavity Pathology Last Updated: Oct. 3, 2006

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Page 1: Oral Pathology

Oral Cavity Pathology

Last Updated: Oct. 3, 2006

Page 2: Oral Pathology

Lichen Planus

• variable and present as white striations (Wickham striae), white papules, white plaques, erythema (mucosal atrophy), erosions (shallow ulcers), or blisters.

• The lesions predominantly affect the buccal mucosa, tongue, and gingivae, although other oral sites are occasionally involved.

• a T-cell–mediated autoimmune disease in which autocytotoxic CD8 + T cells trigger the apoptosis of oral epithelial cells

• Slightly increased risk of oral SCCa

Page 3: Oral Pathology

Lichen Planus

• Spider web.• The buccal

mucosa involved most often

• reticular form most common

Page 5: Oral Pathology

Reticular Oral Lichen Planus

Page 6: Oral Pathology
Page 7: Oral Pathology

Lichen Planus

• A very high power view of the dermoepidermal junction

• Civatte bodies (arrows),

• keratinocyte enlargement, and coarse collagen bundles are illustrated.

Page 8: Oral Pathology

Reference

• E-Medicine Article:– http://www.emedicine.com/derm/

topic663.htm

Page 9: Oral Pathology

Leukoplakia

• Definition: a whitish patch or plaque that cannot be characterized clinically or pathologically as any other disease, and is not associated with any physical or chemical causative agent, except the use of tobacco.

• between 5% and 25% of these lesions are premalignant

Page 10: Oral Pathology

Leukoplakia: Etiology

• No etiologic factor can be identified for most persistent oral leukoplakias (idiopathic leukoplakia). Known causes of leukoplakia include the following:

– Trauma (eg, chronic trauma from a sharp or broken tooth or from mastication may cause keratosis)

– Tobacco use: Chewing tobacco is probably worse than smoking.

– Alcohol– Infections (eg, candidosis, syphilis, Epstein-Barr virus infection):

Epstein-Barr virus infection causes a separate and distinct non–premalignant lesion termed hairy leukoplakia.

– Chemicals (eg, sanguinaria)– Immune defects: Leukoplakias appear to be more common in

transplant patients.

Page 11: Oral Pathology

Homogeneous Leukoplakia

Page 12: Oral Pathology

Erythroleukoplakia

Page 13: Oral Pathology

Verrucous or Nodular Leukoplakia

Page 14: Oral Pathology

Carcinoma(leukoplakia appearing)

Page 15: Oral Pathology

Leukoplakia- Histopathology

• Features highly variable– Ranging from hyperkaratosis and

hyperplasia to atrophy and severe dysplasia

– Significant intrapathologist and interpathologist variation in diagnosing dysplasia

– Molecular studies indicated

Page 16: Oral Pathology

Erythroplakia (Erythroplasia)

• A CLINICAL entity that carries no pathological connotation

• a red and often velvety lesion, which, unlike leukoplakias, does not form a plaque but is level with or depressed below the surrounding mucosa.

• Red oral lesions usually are more dangerous than white oral lesions.

• Carcinomas are seen 17 times more frequently in erythroplakias than in leukoplakias, but leukoplakias are far more common

Page 17: Oral Pathology

Erythroplakia

• 75-90% carcinoma or carcinoma in situ or show severe dysplasia.

• Erythroplasia affects patients of either sex in their sixth and seventh decades and typically involves the floor of the mouth, the ventrum of the tongue, or the soft palate.

Page 18: Oral Pathology

Erythroplakia

Page 19: Oral Pathology

Erythroplakia

Reference: Kumar: Robbins and Cotran: Pathologic Basis of Disease, 7th ed., Copyright © 2005 Saunders

Page 20: Oral Pathology

Oral Hairy Leukoplakia

• Whittish corrugated thickening of mucosa on lateral tongue border

• Occurs almost exclusively in HIV-infected patients– Probability of developing AIDS is 50% at

16 months and 80% at 30 months in patients with hairy leukoplakia

• EBV present in tissue

Page 21: Oral Pathology

Oral Hairy Leukoplakia

Page 22: Oral Pathology

References

• E-Medicine Article: Leukoplakia– http://www.emedicine.com/derm/

topic227.htm

• E-Medicine Article: Oral Mucosa Cancers– http://www.emedicine.com/derm/

topic227.htm

Page 23: Oral Pathology

Oral Cancer-Progression

Reference: Kumar: Robbins and Cotran: Pathologic Basis of Disease, 7th ed., Copyright © 2005 Saunders, An Imprint of Elsevier

Page 24: Oral Pathology

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• Carcinoma in situ.

Page 25: Oral Pathology

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Invasive

Page 26: Oral Pathology

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• ominous characteristic of squamous carcinoma is its ability to surround nerves and to infiltrate for long distances in a perineural fashion

Page 27: Oral Pathology

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• marked hyperchromatism and extremely atypical mitoses

Page 28: Oral Pathology

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• Many nuclei show clumping of chromatin.

• There is an abnormal mitotic figure in the center of the photomicrograph.

Page 29: Oral Pathology

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• Most cells are easily identifiable as squamous cells. At one end there is a mass of parakeratin ("keratin pearl").

Page 30: Oral Pathology

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Page 31: Oral Pathology

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• Desmosomal bridges between cells.

• Abundant organophilic (keratinized) cytoplasm,

• Extracellular squamous pearls, ("keratin pearl").

• Nuclear anaplasia., hyperchromatism.

• Frequent abnormal mitosis.