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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0031099 (
periodontitis
)
12,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tissue specimens submitted to an oral pathology biopsy service during a 17 1/2-year period were studied to determine the types of diagnoses rendered, the general types of pathological processes represented, and the epidemiologic distribution of patients. A total of 15,783 cases were studied. Normal structures were observed in 480 cases, mostly dental follicles, and were eliminated from the study. The remaining 15,303 cases had been diagnosed as pathological entities. A majority of the oral biopsies were taken from either infectious or reactive conditions. Fibromas, periapical granulomas,
periodontitis
, mucoceles, and radicular cysts were the most frequently encountered lesions.
Neoplasms
constituted nearly 15% of all the specimens, with approximately 18% of these being malignant. An additional 360 lesions (2.4% of the total number of specimens) harbored dysplasia and might be considered premalignant. The peak age groups represented in these patients were the third through sixth decades of life. More oral biopsies were performed on females than males. A majority of the patients were white. The purpose of this study was to determine the relative frequency of oral lesions that were considered to be of sufficient clinical significance to merit a biopsy. Although this data might be used as a guide for forming clinical impressions about oral lesions, the clinician must always be aware of the possible occurrence of more rare lesions.
...
PMID:A diagnostic and epidemiologic survey of 15,783 oral lesions. 347 65
Dental radiographs are critical for the complete assessment and treatment of dental diseases. Dental radiography is commonly used to evaluate congenital dental defects, periodontal disease, orthodontic manipulations, oral tumors, endodontic treatments, oral trauma, and any situation where an abnormality is suspected. Although standard radiographic equipment and film can be used to produce dental radiographs, dental X-ray equipment and film provide superior quality images and greater convenience of animal patient positioning. An understanding of normal dental radiographic anatomy is important when interpreting dental radiographs. Stage III
periodontitis
is the earliest stage of periodontal disease at which radiographic abnormalities become apparent. Bone loss associated with periodontal disease can be classified as either horizontal or vertical. Periapical radiolucencies can represent granulomas, cysts, or abscesses, whereas periapical radiodensities may represent sclerotic bone or condensing osteitis. Lytic lesions of the bone of the jaw often represent oral neoplasms.
Neoplasms
also can displace or disrupt teeth in the dental arch. Resorptive lesions can be external or internal and appear as radiolucent areas involving the external surface of the root or the pulp cavity, respectively. Feline dental resorptive lesions, also known as odontoclastic resorptions, are a specific form of dental resorptive lesions unique to cats.
...
PMID:Radiographic signs and diagnosis of dental disease. 821 Jul 96
The great apes (chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans) are our closest relatives. Despite the many similarities, there are significant differences in aging among apes, including the human ape. Common to all are dental attrition,
periodontitis
, tooth loss, osteopenia, and arthritis, although gout is uniquely human and spondyloarthropathy is more prevalent in apes than humans. Humans are more prone to frailty, sarcopenia, osteoporosis, longevity past reproductive senescence, loss of brain volume, and Alzheimer dementia. Cerebral vascular disease occurs in both humans and apes. Cardiovascular disease mortality increases in aging humans and apes, but coronary atherosclerosis is the most significant type in humans. In captive apes, idiopathic myocardial fibrosis and cardiomyopathy predominate, with arteriosclerosis of intramural coronary arteries. Similar cardiac lesions are occasionally seen in wild apes. Vascular changes in heart and kidneys and aortic dissections in gorillas and bonobos suggest that hypertension may be involved in pathogenesis. Chronic kidney disease is common in elderly humans and some aging apes and is linked with cardiovascular disease in orangutans.
Neoplasms
common to aging humans and apes include uterine leiomyomas in chimpanzees, but other tumors of elderly humans, such as breast, prostate, lung, and colorectal cancers, are uncommon in apes. Among the apes, chimpanzees have been best studied in laboratory settings, and more comparative research is needed into the pathology of geriatric zoo-housed and wild apes. Increasing longevity of humans and apes makes understanding aging processes and diseases imperative for optimizing quality of life in all the ape species.
...
PMID:Comparative Pathology of Aging Great Apes: Bonobos, Chimpanzees, Gorillas, and Orangutans. 2672 8