Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
➤ Gửi thông báo lỗi ⚠️ Báo cáo tài liệu vi phạmNội dung chi tiết: Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
Differential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the l Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2lesion as arising in the soft tissue and provide its detailed description (Chapter 2), determine its appropriate category (e.g. white lesion that rubs off, red lesion, and ulceration) as listed in Chapter 3, and then create a nonprioritized list of all possible soft tissue lesions that may produce a Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2 similar clinical picture. The next step is to create a prioritized differential diagnosis list; the list should be rearranged with the most probableEbook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
lesion ranked at the top and the least likely at the bottom. The process of priority ranking can be complicated at times, so it behooves the clinicianDifferential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the l Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2isease entity. The priority ranking is directly related to the relative incidence of the lesions if all other factors about the lesions are similar. Thus, in developing a clinical differential diagnosis, the clinician first ranks the lesions in order of their relative frequency of occurrence and the Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2n modifies this order based on age, gender, race, and anatomic location.A special case can exist in which two or more lesions are synchronously presenEbook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
t. If so, then seven possibilities must be considered:•Lesions A and B are completely unrelated:1Lesions A and B are both present as a matter of chancDifferential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the l Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2tical Guide to Soft Tissue Ora! Disease, Second Edition. Michael A. Kahn and J. Michael Hall. <£) 2018 by the American Dental Association. Published 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.115116 Diagnosis and Management5Lesion A and Lesion B are both secondary to a third lesion, which may be occult.b. Lesio Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2n A and Lesion B are manifestations of systemic disease.7Lesion A and Lesion B form part of a syndrome.Once a prioritized ranking differential diagnosEbook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
is list has been created, the clinician should recheck its credibility, particularly the top choices. This entails further examination of the lesion, Differential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the l Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2r choices are referred to as the working or provisional diagnosis-, in some instances, the first choice is overwhelmingly favored and becomes the singular working diagnosis. The working diagnosis dictates the proper management of the lesion, including possible surgery. The final diagnosis is usually Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2 provided by the pathologist who evaluates the biopsied tissue microscopically. In some instances the microscopic appearance of the lesion is not diagEbook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
nostic in its own right and must be correlated closely with the previously submitted or gathered information. At times, an equivocal diagnosis remainsDifferential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the l Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2ic ulcerTip - Should heal in 7-10 days if the patient is immunocompetent; extremely common occurrence.Pitfall - Traumatic ulcerative granuloma with stromal eosinophilia (TƯGSE) is a very deep, slow-healing traumatic ulcer that can take weeks to months to heal. Also, factitial ulcers (self-inflicted) Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2 may be repeatedly traumatized despite the patient's denial.2Recurrent aphthous ulcer, minor typeTip - Occurs only on movable mucosa.Pitfall - May appEbook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
ear identical to herpes simplex infection once the latter's vesicle is ruptured. Many systemic conditions also have oral aphthous-like ulcerations.3ReDifferential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the l Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2erpes simplex infectionTip - Occurs anywhere in the mouth, on both movable and nonmovable mucosa (bound to bone, i.e. hard palate and attached gingiva). In addition to painful ulcers the patient will also have fever, malaise, lymphadenopathy, and stomatitis, which always includes the gingiva.Pitfall Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2 - Often misdiagnosed as acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis (ANUG) prior to the onset and recognition of vesicles.Differential Diagnosis of CommoEbook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2
n Oral Soft Tissue lesions 117I Macules I—Vesicles—HUlcers I )Herpangina|—, Lesions are limited to the oropharynx I I Papule > Deep ulcer]—{ NecrotiziDifferential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the l Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2tive gingivitis; ĨUGSE, traumatic ulcerative granuloma with stromal eosinophilia.5Recurrent herpes simplex infectionTip - A crop of intraoral ulcers that occurs only on nonmovable mucosa (bound to bone, i.e. hard palate and attached gingiva); no other symptoms besides painful ulcers preceded by vesi Ebook The ADA practical guide to soft tissue oral disease (2/E): Part 2cles.Pitfall - Mistaken for aphthous ulcer but preceded by a vesicle. Unlike aphthous ulcers, herpes simplex ulcers do not occur on movable mucosa.Differential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the lDifferential Diagnosis of CommoFollowing the initial comprehensive head and neck soft tissue examination (Chapter 1), the clinician can identify the lGọi ngay
Chat zalo
Facebook