Results 211 to 220 of about 11,538 (251)
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Candidiasis and atrophic tongue lesions

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1981
In an attempt to shed more light on the role of Candida albicans in the genesis of median rhomboid glossitis, a three-part study of normal, atrophic, and cadaver tongues was undertaken. Occasional fungal hyphae were found in 36 percent of the clinically normal tongues.
B A, Wright, F, Fenwick
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Atrophic tongue associated with Candida

Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine, 2005
Background:  Traditionally, total atrophic tongue has been due to nutritional deficiencies, such as vitamin B12, folic acid, or iron deficiencies, and partial atrophic tongue has been well known as median rhomboid glossitis or geographic tongue. The other cause of atrophic tongue is oral candidiasis.Methods:  Forty patients with atrophic change of the ...
Haruhiko, Terai, Masashi, Shimahara
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Triple Furrowed Atrophic Tongue of Myasthenia Gravis

Journal of Clinical Neuromuscular Disease, 2017
Summary: The authors present a case and image of a patient with refractory tongue weakness and characteristic triple furrowed pattern of atrophy due to autoimmune myasthenia gravis.
Nathan P, Young   +3 more
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Partial atrophic tongue other than median rhomboid glossitis

Clinical and Experimental Dermatology, 2007
A group of 23 patients with partial atrophic change of the tongue was examined for candidiasis. All of them reported pain in the tongue on eating hot or spicy food. The intensity of the tongue pain was evaluated before and after treatment using a visual analogue scale.
H, Terai, M, Shimahara
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Atrophic change of tongue papilla in 44 patients with Sjögren syndrome

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology, and Endodontology, 2009
The purpose of this study was to investigate the atrophic change of tongue papilla in Sjögren syndrome (SjS) patients and the correlation with characteristic features of the disease.Atrophic change of tongue papilla, investigated by a digital microscope, was classified from score 0 (normal) to score 6 (severe) and compared among 44 SjS patients, 20 ...
Kazuhiko, Yamamoto   +7 more
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Factors associated with the presence of atrophic tongue in patients with dry mouth

Gerodontology, 2013
PurposeThis study aimed to identify factors associated with atrophic tongue in patients with dry mouth.MethodsDiscriminant analysis was performed in 1265 patients with dry mouth to identify factors that might influence the risk of developing atrophic tongue.
Hisato, Kimori   +10 more
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VITAMIN B DEFICIENCY AND THE ATROPHIC TONGUE

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1933
Glossitis with atrophy of the lingual papillae to ultimate baldness constitutes a conspicuous manifestation of a number of diseases. Recent occasion1has been taken to review this subject. Among the conditions in which the atrophic tongue has been described are pernicious anemia, achlorhydric anemia, anemia of pregnancy, pellagra, sprue, Plummer-Vinson ...
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Helicobacter pylori colonization of tongue mucosa – increased incidence in atrophic glossitis and burning mouth syndrome (BMS)

Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine, 2001
Abstract: Nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed to detect the presence of Helicobacter pylori in tongue mucosa in 268 patients divided into four groups according to their diagnosis: 87 with atrophic glossitis, 37 with benign migratory glossitis and 144 with burning mouth syndrome (BMS).
K, Gall-Troselj   +4 more
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An Atrophic, Telangiectatic Patch at the Distal Border of the Tongue: A Mucous Membrane Manifestation of Xeroderma Pigmentosum

Pediatric Dermatology, 2014
AbstractXeroderma pigmentosum (XP) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by clinical and cellular sensitivity, pigmentary changes, and early development of malignancies in sun‐exposed mucocutaneous and ocular structures due to a defective ability to repair intracellular DNA damage.
Sheyla Batista, Bologna   +3 more
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The Clinical Study of the Atrophic Tongue

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1932
Excerpt The bald tongue has been recognized for many years by clinicians. Its association with anemia was probably first appreciated in 1846 by Dawson.1In 1909 William Hunter2concluded an argument ...
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