Abstract

Oral candidosis is the most common fungal infection that frequently occurs in patients debilitated by other diseases or conditions. No candidosis happens without a cause; hence oral candidosis has been branded as a disease of the diseased. Prior research has identified oral candidosis as a mark of systemic diseases, such as hematinic deficiency, diabetes mellitus, leukopenia, HIV/AIDS, malignancies, and carbohydrate-rich diet, drugs, or immunosuppressive conditions. An array of interaction between Candida and the host is dynamic and complex. Candida exhibits multifaceted strategies for growth, proliferation, evasion of host defenses, and survival within the host to induce fungal infection. Oral candidosis presents a variety of clinical forms, including pseudomembranous candidosis, erythematous candidosis, angular cheilitis, median rhomboid glossitis, cheilocandidosis, juxtavermillion candidosis, mucocutaneous candidosis, hyperplastic candidosis, oropharyngeal candidosis, and rare suppurative candidosis. The prognosis is usually favorable, but treatment failure or recurrence is common due to either incorrect diagnosis, missing other pathology, inability to address underlying risk factors, or inaccurate prescription of antifungal agents. In immunocompromised patients, oropharyngeal candidosis can spread to the bloodstream or upper gastrointestinal tract, leading to potentially lethal systemic candidosis. This review therefore describes oral candidosis with regard to its pathophysiology and best practice for diagnosis, practical classification, and successful management.

Highlights

  • It may affect the efficiency of thesystemic mucosa disease, barrier and become superinfected with oral can be a mirror of underlying suchthen as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/AIDS, nutritional deficiency, candidosis

  • [28,29,30,31,32], this review describes the pathophysiology of oral candidosis efficiency the mucosa barrier and become superinfected with oral candidosis vides best of practice for diagnosis, practical classification, and successful management of

  • Based on our previous studies and over 30 years of oral medicine practice in a medical center [28,29,30,31,32], this review describes the pathophysiology of oral candidosis and provides best practice for diagnosis, practical classification, and successful management of patients with this condition

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Unsuccessful management or recurrence of oral candidosis is not uncommon due to either incorrect diagnosis, missing other pathology, failure to correct the underlying predisposing factors, or improper prescription of antifungal agents, such as recurring use of nystatin oral suspension, inadequate treatment duration, and decrease in drug susceptibility or increase of azole-resistant strains with time [2,7,16,20]. Has been lichen given to oral candidosis, reaction, chronic graft-versus-host leukoplakia, cell carcinoma, and suspicion should be disease, raised when patients and havesquamous oral candidosis [1,2,5] It may affect the efficiency of thesystemic mucosa disease, barrier and become superinfected with oral can be a mirror of underlying suchthen as HIV/AIDS, nutritional deficiency, candidosis [4,5,6,7]. Based on our previous studies and over 30 years of oral medicine practice in a medical center [28,29,30,31,32], this review describes the pathophysiology of oral candidosis and provides best practice for diagnosis, practical classification, and successful management of patients with this condition

Interplay of Host Defenses and Candida Virulence Factors in Oral Candidosis
Iron Deficiency and Immunosuppression in Oral Candidosis
Diagnosis of Oral Candidosis
Classification of Oral Candidosis
Chronic
Median
Candida-associated
Management for Oral Candidosis Patients
Findings
Conclusions and Important
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call