Giant cell lichenoid stomatitis - an oral medicine case book
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Date
Authors
Robinson, Liam
Kotze, Leande
Van Heerden, Willem Francois Petrus
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
South African Dental Association
Abstract
A 53-year-old female patient presented with a two-week
history of intermittently painful oral mucosal lesions when
eating spicy, salty or sour foods. The patient reported
a long-term history of psoriasis treated by topical corticosteroids
only. The remainder of the patient’s medical
history was unremarkable. On intraoral examination,
lesions were noted bilaterally in the posterior buccal commissures,
appearing as centrally erosive lesions bound by
white striations (Figure 1). Additionally, there were areas
of desquamative gingivitis in the anterior maxillary gingiva.
The clinical suspicion was that of oral lichen planus or
oral lichenoid lesions. An incision biopsy from the left
buccal mucosa was performed and submitted for histological
assessment.
Description
Keywords
Female patient, Oral mucosal lesions, Psoriasis, Painful
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Robinson, L.; Kotze, L. & Van Heerden, W.F.P. 2020, 'Giant cell lichenoid stomatitis - an oral medicine case book', South African Dental Journal, vol. 75, no. 10, pp. 550-552.