Results 361 to 370 of about 2,361,676 (390)
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The oral mucosa: A barrier site participating in tissue-specific and systemic immunity.
Oral Diseases, 2018In the oral cavity, the immune system is constantly exposed to unique tissue-specific signals, including a rich community of commensal microbes and their metabolites, continuous tissue damage from mastication, and antigens from food and airborne ...
N. Moutsopoulos, H. Moutsopoulos
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Larva migrans of the Oral Mucosa
Dermatology, 1988A case of buccal larva migrans is presented. This rare peculiar localization is discussed. The different treatments are mentioned with special regard to the topical and systemic use of the thiabendazole.
André, Josette+3 more
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Archives of Dermatology, 1926
From an embryologic point of view, certain diseases of the oral and nasal mucosa are logically related to those on the cutaneous surface. A common ectodermic origin brings affections of these structures in closer relation to each other than with the diseases of the deeper digestive tract which originates from the entoderm. Furthermore, eruptions of the
John A. Fordyce, George M. Mackee
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From an embryologic point of view, certain diseases of the oral and nasal mucosa are logically related to those on the cutaneous surface. A common ectodermic origin brings affections of these structures in closer relation to each other than with the diseases of the deeper digestive tract which originates from the entoderm. Furthermore, eruptions of the
John A. Fordyce, George M. Mackee
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Eosinophilic ulcer of oral mucosa
International Journal of Dermatology, 1998A 41‐year‐old woman was seen for the examination of a painless lesion on the posterior hard palate of 2 weeks’ duration. She had no systemic symptoms. Examination of the hard palate showed a single 1 × 1 cm, round, punched out ulcer with an erythematous base; the margins of the ulcer were slightly raised and indurated ( Fig. 1). Other clinical findings
Won Hyoung Kang+3 more
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Lymphoepithelial cysts of the oral mucosa
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1973Abstract Twenty-one cases of biopsied lesions diagnosed as lymphoepithelial cyst have been reported. With no predilection for either sex, these rare lesions occurred primarily in the floor of the mouth as small, nodular, asymptomatic swellings of unknown duration and were interpreted most often as mucoceles.
John L. Giunta, Edmund Cataldo
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Leukoedema of the human oral mucosa
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1968Abstract The clinical and histologic features of leukoedema of the oral mucosa have been described in nineteen cases reviewed by Sandstead, who had originally introduced the term, and three cases studied at the Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health.
Harold R. Stanley+2 more
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Cellular neurothekeoma of the oral mucosa
Oral Oncology, 2001Cellular neurothekeoma is an unusual benign neoplasm which, despite its name, is of uncertain origin. This report describes a cellular neurothekeoma of the cheek mucosa, the first at this site. The tumour presented in a 29-year-old man as a discrete mucosal thickening.
M Suhr, A.W Barrett
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Biomechanics of prehensile oral mucosa
Journal of Morphology, 1967AbstractLarge dogs are able to deliver a powerful bite that generates considerable stress in the anterior, prehensile part of the jaws.In the upper jaw most of the biting force is borne by the anterior teeth. The palatal mucosa provides little resistance to deformation. It is easily compressed and rather mobile.In the lower jaw, the mucosa covering the
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Superficial Mucoceles of the Oral Mucosa
The American Journal of Dermatopathology, 1990Superficial mucoceles are innocuous vesicular lesions that have been mistaken for mucous membrane pemphigoid. Clinically they are asymptomatic, small, clear, tense vesicles that have a predilection for the retromolar pad area, posterior buccal mucosa, and soft palate. Microscopically they are subepithelial extravasations of sialomucin that occur at the
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Ultrastructures of mechanoreceptors in the oral mucosa
Anatomical Science International, 2004The present review describes the fine structures of lamellated mechanoreceptive corpuscles, Merkel cell-neurite complexes and free nerve endings in the oral mucosae of mammals, with special attention to axon terminals and lamellar cells. The mechanoreceptive nerve endings of the oral mucosa were studied using histochemistry, immunohistochemistry and ...
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