Abstract

Oral manifestations of COVID-19 are amongst the most obscure and ill-reported. Of these, angina bullosa haemorrhagica is amongst the rarest. Only 2 cases of angina bullosa haemorrhagica in COVID-19 patients have been reported in literature. Angina bullosa haemorrhagica (ABH) is an enigmatic, abstruse condition represented by sudden onset of painful subepithelial, mucosal blood-filled vesicles and bullae in the oral cavity. It is not attributed to any systemic conditions, blood dyscracias or other well-known dermatological pathologies. The occurrence of these lesions in patients of COVID-19 suggests that the underlying pathology of the latter may predispose to ABH and thus help in shedding some light onto the pathogenesis of this obscure disease. Herein we present 2 cases of ABH in patients of COVID-19 within a few weeks of the resolution of the latter. Both patients reported that they had never had this condition before and that this was the first presentation of the symptom. A review of literature shows that the etiopathogenesis of ABH is ambiguous at best and that the pathology underlying the oral manifestation of COVID-19 may well be applicable to ABH as well. Various mechanisms have been proposed to cause oral manifestations in COVID-19 patients. These include imbalance in the RAS pathway causing mucosal disruption, immune dysregulation, deranged cellular immune mechanism and disruption of local immune mechanisms. Since ABH has been reported in COVID 19, it is plausible that some of the mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of oral manifestations may explain the pathogenesis of ABH.

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