Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038362 (stomatitis)
8,852 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Noma (cancrum oris) is a mutilating necrotising disease of the orofacial tissues. It affects predominantly debilitated malnourished children, in whom the necrotic process may cause severe damage to mid-facial structures. Its aetiopathogenesis is uncertain, but its course is fulminating, and without timely intervention the disease may be fatal. Antibiotic treatment during any stage of necrotising stomatitis and of its sequel noma can stop progression of the disease; therefore detection and treatment of early intraoral necrotising lesions whether necrotising gingivitis, necrotising periodontitis or necrotising stomatitis are critical in preventing noma. We present an extreme case of noma in a malnourished HIV-seropositive child. There was an acute necrotic process affecting both the maxilla and the mandible with denudation of bone, spontaneous exfoliation of teeth, necrotising fasciitis and myonecrosis which destroyed the lips and cheeks and extended to the infra-orbital margins. There was severe disfigurement and severe impairment of function. Noma is primarily an anaerobic bacterial infection with secondary ischaemia leading to osteonecrosis and mid-facial destruction.
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PMID:Noma (cancrum oris): a report of a case in a young AIDS patient with a review of the pathogenesis. 2290 64

Noma (canrum oris) is a mutilating necrotizing disease of uncertain etiology, but it is accepted that it is caused primarily by a polybacterial infection with secondary ischemia. The consequent necrotizing fasciitis, myonecrosis, and osteonecrosis results in destruction of facial structures with severe functional impairment and disfigurement. It most frequently affects children, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, who are malnourished or debilitated by systemic conditions including but not limited to malaria, measles, and tuberculosis; and less frequently debilitated HIV-seropositive subjects. In the vast majority of cases, in susceptible subjects, noma is preceded by necrotizing stomatitis. However, it has been reported, albeit rarely, that noma can arise without any preceding oral lesions being observed. Noma is not recurrent and is not transmissible.
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PMID:Noma (cancrum oris): An unresolved global challenge. 3109 Jan 45