Oral manifestations in HIV-infected individuals from Thailand and Cambodia

Oral manifestations were studied in 87 HIV-positive Thai adults (study 1), 45 HIV-positive children (study 2) and 101 HIV-positive (study 3). In study 1, 48% of patients had oral lesions; 23% had one and 13.8% two oral manifestations. Oral pseudomembranous candidiasis was found in 10.3%, erythematou...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reichart P.A., Khongkhunthian P., Bendick C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-0042330088&partnerID=40&md5=cd97100b504bbc8e6cad2cfb786db4e6
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/1064
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
Language: English
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Summary:Oral manifestations were studied in 87 HIV-positive Thai adults (study 1), 45 HIV-positive children (study 2) and 101 HIV-positive (study 3). In study 1, 48% of patients had oral lesions; 23% had one and 13.8% two oral manifestations. Oral pseudomembranous candidiasis was found in 10.3%, erythematous candidiasis in 6.9%, and hairy leukoplakia (HL) in 11.5% of the patients. In study 2, 24.4% of children revealed one, 17.8% two and 6.6% three oral lesions; erythematous candidiasis was seen in 17.8%, and HL in 6.7% of the children. Fifteen patients (33.3%) received antiretroviral therapy. In study 3, pseudomembranous candidiasis was found in 52.5%, HL in 35.6% and necrotizing gingivo-periodontitis in 27.7%. Only 10% of patients were without oral lesions. The present three studies among HIV-infected Thai and Cambodians indicated a high prevalence of oral lesions, particularly variants of oral candidiasis such as pseudomembranous and erythematous candidiasis. Also, oral HL was a common finding, more so in patients with AIDS-associated diseases as represented by patients of study 3. Oral candidiasis and oral HL also seem to be quite prevalent in pediatric HIV-infected patients. In the absence of parameters indicating the degree of immunosuppression (CD4+ cell counts and viral load) these oral lesions may be considered strong indicators of HIV-associated immunodeficiency.