Oral Manifestations of Leukaemia

The oral manifestation of leukaemia can be summarized as follows.

In acute leukaemia- localized or generalized gingival hyperplasia is generally observed. It mainly affects the interdental papillae and the marginal gingiva. 

It is caused by inflammation, or leukemic infiltration, and may be localized or generalized, the latter being the most common form.  The infiltration of leukemic cells may also involve periapical tissues and simulate, both clinically and radiographically, periapical inflammatory lesions.  

In chronic leukaemia, the leukemic infiltrates in oral tissues is less frequent and can be observed:  

  1. Pallor of the mucosa  
  2. soft tissue infections 
  3. Generalized lymphadenopathy 

The manifestations of thrombocytopenia are more common when the platelet count is below 50,000 cells/mm3 and may manifest as bruising, petechiae in the hard and soft palate, and also spontaneous gingival bleeding, especially if the platelet count is below 20,000 cells/mm3. 

Opportunistic infections with Candida Albicans and Herpes viruses are common and can involve any area of the mucosa. Ulcers can also result from impaired immune defence in combating normal microbial flora. 

 

Oral Manifestations Related to Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT) 

 

The oral manifestations that may be present are correlated with the phases of HSCT:  

Preconditioning: oral infections, ulceration, bleeding, and temporomandibular joint dysfunction.

Neutropenic phase conditioning: mucositis, dysgeusia, xerostomia, bleeding, oral pain, opportunistic infections, neurotoxicity, and temporomandibular dysfunction, usually manifesting with high prevalence and severe forms; at this stage, the patient may develop hyperacute GVHD with further severe oral complications.  

Engraftment to hematopoietic recovery: opportunistic infections are common and acute GVHD becomes a concern; bleeding may be present, xerostomia, neurotoxicity, granulomas/papillomas, and temporomandibular dysfunction.  

Immune reconstitution/recovery from systemic toxicity: salivary dysfunction, late viral infections, craniofacial growth abnormalities, cGVHD, and squamous cell carcinoma.  

The long-term survival: in paediatric patients, particularly children under 6 years, one can observe complications in the development of bones and teeth. At this stage, recurrence and malignant neoplasms can be observed in the occurrence of GVHD, mucositis, gingivitis, erythema, and pain are usually observed.  

In cGVHD, the most common oral manifestations are lichen-type features, hyperkeratotic plaques, mucocele, atrophic mucosa, ulceration, fibrosis with limited mouth opening, hyposalivation, and xerostomiaIn addition, secondary to cGVHD, the patients have a greater tendency to develop malignancies. 

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Reference: Caroline Zimmermann, Maria Inês Meurer, Liliane Janete Grando, Joanita Ângela Gonzaga Del Moral, Inês Beatriz da Silva Rath, and Silvia Schaefer Tavares  Journal of Oncology Volume 2015 (2015), Article ID 571739, 14 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/571739 

This post was published to Dental Knowledge at 5:37:26 PM 6/29/2017