| Literature DB >> 30431729 |
Liborija Lugović-Mihić1,2, Kristina Pilipović2, Iva Crnarić1, Mirna Šitum1,2, Tomislav Duvančić1.
Abstract
Although cheilitis as a term describing lip inflammation has been identified and recognized for a long time, until now there have been no clear recommendations for its work-up and classification. The disease may appear as an isolated condition or as part of certain systemic diseases/conditions (such as anemia due to vitamin B12 or iron deficiency) or local infections (e.g., herpes and oral candidiasis). Cheilitis can also be a symptom of a contact reaction to an irritant or allergen, or may be provoked by sun exposure (actinic cheilitis) or drug intake, especially retinoids. Generally, the forms most commonly reported in the literature are angular, contact (allergic and irritant), actinic, glandular, granulomatous, exfoliative and plasma cell cheilitis. However, variable nomenclature is used and subtypes are grouped and named differently. According to our experience and clinical practice, we suggest classification based on primary differences in the duration and etiology of individual groups of cheilitis, as follows: 1) mainly reversible (simplex, angular/infective, contact/eczematous, exfoliative, drug-related); 2) mainly irreversible (actinic, granulomatous, glandular, plasma cell); and 3) cheilitis connected to dermatoses and systemic diseases (lupus, lichen planus, pemphi-gus/pemphigoid group, -angioedema, xerostomia, etc.).Entities:
Keywords: Actinic Cheilitis; Cheilitis; Classification; Dermatitis, Contact; Inflammation; Lip Diseases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30431729 PMCID: PMC6531998 DOI: 10.20471/acc.2018.57.02.16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Clin Croat ISSN: 0353-9466 Impact factor: 0.780
Proposed classification of cheilitis
| Mostly reversible | Mostly persistent | In association with dermatoses and systemic diseases (common diseases) |
|---|---|---|
| Cheilitis simplex | Actinic cheilitis | Lupus erythematosus |
Prominent features of mostly reversible cheilitis
| Mostly reversible cheilitis | Occurrence | Related factors | Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cheilitis simplex | Common | Lip licking | Advice on environmental conditions |
| Angular/infective cheilitis | Common | Infective agents | Elimination of local predisposing factors |
| Contact/eczematous cheilitis | Very common | Atopy, contact allergens/irritants | Topical corticosteroids (low to medium potency), emollients |
| Exfoliative cheilitis | Rare | Lip licking/picking | Corticosteroids |
| Drug related cheilitis | Rare | Drugs | Emollients |
Fig. 1Cheilitis simplex.
Fig. 2Contact/eczematous cheilitis.
Common features of mostly persistent cheilitis
| Mostly persistent cheilitis | Occurrence | Related factors | Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Actinic cheilitis | Rare | Sun damage (outdoor workers, | Topical low to medium potency corticosteroids or 5-fluorouracil, chemical peel cryotherapy, electrosurgery, vermilionectomy, |
| Granulomatous cheilitis | Rare | Other granulomatous diseases | Topical, intralesional (e.g., repeated triamcinolone acetonide 2.5-5.0 mg/mL) and systemic corticosteroids and/or antibiotics |
| Glandular cheilitis | Very rare | Smoking, poor oral hygiene, | Systemic antibiotics and topical, intralesional or systemic corticosteroids, or surgical excision |
| Plasma cell cheilitis | Very rare | Unknown | Topical and intralesional corticosteroids, destructive measures, or sometimes even immunosuppressants |
Fig. 3Actinic cheilitis (a photo from ref. 23; with the author’s permission and by the courtesy of Professor Mravak-Stipetić).
Fig. 4Granulomatous cheilitis.
Fig. 5Lip lesions/cheilitis in association with pemphigus vulgaris.
Fig. 6Lip lesions/cheilitis in association with erythema multiforme.
Common diagnostic parameters/procedures related to specific cheilitis group
| Mostly reversible | Mostly persistent (irreversible) | In association with dermatoses and systemic diseases |
|---|---|---|
| – History data: drug intake, habits (lip licking, biting, sucking, picking, etc.), weather conditions (cold, hot, windy, dry weather), age, poor oral hygiene, open-mouthed breathing, related diseases/conditions (e.g., diabetes, psychiatric disorders, atrophic glossitis, dysphagia, esophageal webbing, etc.) | Persistent lesions require biopsy and histopathologic analysis | Diagnostic work-up according to suspected disease |