Glossitis was found in 5-Minute Clinical Consult which helps you diagnose, treat, and follow up on over 900 medical conditions seen in everyday practice.
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Basics
Description
- An acute or chronic inflammation of the tongue, either as primary disease or a symptom of systemic disease
- Common forms:
- Atrophic glossitis (AG) or smooth tongue
- Benign migratory glossitis (BMG) or geographic tongue or erythema migrans
- Median rhomboid glossitis (MRG)
- Herpetic geometric glossitis (HGG)
- System(s) affected: Gastrointestinal
Epidemiology
- Predominant age: All ages; BMG more frequent in children
- Predominant gender:
- Male > Female (3:1, MRG)
- Female > Male (BMG)
Geriatric Considerations
Many patients with glossitis caused by nutritional deficiencies are postmenopausal or elderly.
Prevalence
Varies; usual reported range: 1–14%
Risk Factors
- Poor nutrition
- Dentures
- Piercings
- Allergic background (e.g., asthma, eczema, hay fever)
- Smoking, smokeless tobacco
- Alcoholism
- Anxiety, stress
- Depression
- Hormonal disturbances
- Oral contraceptives
- Advancing age
- Immunocompromised state
Genetics
Familial history may be present with BMG.
General Prevention
- Evaluation of nutritional status, including B-vitamin deficiencies, anemias
- Cessation of tobacco use (including smokeless)
- Assess for irritation from teeth, dentures, or piercings.
Pathophysiology
Tongue:
- AG: Atrophy of filiform papillae
- BMG: Erythematous, yellow-white lesions (dorsum)
- MRG: Atrophic filiform, plaquelike lesions (midline)
- HGG: Linear fissures (dorsum)
Etiology
- Systemic:
- Nutritional deficiencies (e.g., B12, folic acid)
- Anemia (pernicious, iron deficiency)
- HIV (opportunistic infections such as candidiasis, herpes simplex virus [HSV]; or HIV-associated changes such as loss of papillae)
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics
- Topical or inhaled corticosteroids
- Various other medications (e.g., captopril, clarithromycin, enalapril, lansoprazole, lithium, metronidazole, NSAIDs)
- Local:
- Infections (e.g., HSV, Epstein-Barr virus, candidiasis)
- Trauma (ill-fitting dentures, piercings, burns, convulsive seizures)
- Primary irritants (alcohol, tobacco, hot foods, spices, excessive peppermint, citrus)
- Sensitization with chemical irritants (e.g., dyes, mouthwash, toothpaste, systemic drugs)
- Malignancy (95% are squamous cell)
Commonly Associated Conditions
- Fissured tongue (BMG)
- HIV infection (rare)
- Reiter syndrome (rare)
- Down syndrome (rare)
- Crohn disease (rare)
- Celiac disease (possible correlation)
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