| Literature DB >> 35563151 |
Yuexin Guo1, Boya Wang2, Han Gao3, Chengwei He3, Rongxuan Hua4, Lei Gao5, Yixuan Du1, Jingdong Xu3.
Abstract
With the development of psychology and medicine, more and more diseases have found their psychological origins and associations, especially ulceration and other mucosal injuries, within the digestive system. However, the association of psychological factors with lesions of the oral mucosa, including oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), burning mouth syndrome (BMS), and recurrent aphthous stomatitis (RAS), have not been fully characterized. In this review, after introducing the association between psychological and nervous factors and diseases, we provide detailed descriptions of the psychology and nerve fibers involved in the pathology of OSCC, BMS, and RAS, pointing out the underlying mechanisms and suggesting the clinical indications.Entities:
Keywords: disease; interactions; oral mucosa; pathology; psychology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35563151 PMCID: PMC9099906 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23094760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Oral symptoms involved in psychological problems.
| Psychology Problems | Oral Symptoms | Refs. |
|---|---|---|
| Olanzapine-induced anticholinergic toxicity | Dry oral mucosa | [ |
| Alzheimer’s disease (AD) | Tau protein in oral mucosa | [ |
| Bulimia and anorexia nervosa | Abrasion of teeth enamel | [ |
| Epidermoid cysts of the central nervous system | Similar to symptoms in oral mucosa | [ |
| Neurocutaneous syndromes (and other diseases associated with DNA repair) | Teeth and oral mucosa lesions | [ |
| Structural changes in innervations in oral cavity | Loss of sense | [ |
Oral diseases with psychological abnormalities.
| Oral Diseases | Psychological Abnormalities | Oral Manifestations | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) | Higher α1 adrenergic receptors | Oral ulcers and lumps, pain feeling | [ |
| Primary Sjögren’s syndrome | Depression and anxiety | More frequent oral lesions; negative impact on life quality | [ |
| Burning mouth syndrome (BMS) | Structural and functional deficits within the nervous system | Burning feeling without an obvious cause | [ |
| Herpes simplex encephalitis | Fatal disease of the central nervous system | Painful blisters or open sores (ulcers) | [ |
| Oral mucosa cancers | Antitumor drugs improve psychological symptoms | Oral pumps and lesions | [ |
| Primary burning mouth syndrome | PNS involvement | Burning feeling in mouth | [ |
| Recurrent aphthous stomatitis | Hypofunction of the sympathetic nervous system | Painful round shallow ulcers | [ |
| Inflammatory stimulation of the oral mucosa | Activation of microglial cells | Oral mucosal inflammation | [ |
| Poliovirus | Affects the anterior horn motor neurons of the spinal cord causing paralysis | [ | |
| Xerostomia | Autonomic nervous system imbalance | Dryness of the oral mucosa | [ |
| Burning mouth syndrome | Decreased or modified steroid synthesis | Burning feeling in mouth | [ |
| Lingual conical papillae | Alterations of different kinds of neurons | Bumps and rough tongue | [ |
| Lichen planus and lichenoid reactions | Loss of PNS fibers | Asymptomatic white reticular striae to painful erythema and erosions | [ |
| Heat stimulation | Large primary neurons responding to high-threshold noxious heat are abundant in the tooth pulp | Altered pain | [ |
| Oral mucosa continuous remodeling | Sensory nervous apparatus involvement | Leaky epithelial barrier, a fibrotic lamina propria, the release of inflammatory mediators, and the recruitment of immune infiltrate | [ |
| Oral dysesthesia (OD) | Soft tissue grafts | Merkel cells and permanent dysesthesia in the oral mucosa | [ |
Diseases with both the psychological problems and oral manifestations.
| Diseases | Psychological Problems | Oral Manifestations | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Congenital herpes simplex | CNS infection | Oral infection | [ |
| Enterovirus A71 (EV-A71) | Viral antigens/RNA in the CNS | Viral antigens/RNA in the squamous epithelia of the oral cavity | [ |
| Verrucous lesions | Malocclusions in CNS | Verrucous lesions affect the oral mucosa (rare) | [ |
| Cryptococcosis | Presentations in the CNS | Excision of nodules in the oral mucosa assists recovery | [ |
| Paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM) | Involvement of CNS | Common infected symptoms | [ |
| Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) | Clinical diseases in CNS | Vesicular lesions of the oral mucosa | [ |
| Cowden syndrome | Similar CNS symptoms with that in the oral mucosa | Multiple hamartomatous neoplasms of the oral mucosa | [ |
| Lipoid proteinosis (LP) | Involvement of CNS | Yellow-white plaques on oral mucosa | [ |
| Enterovirus 71 (EV71) (hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFMD)) | brainstem encephalitis | Vesicular lesions on oral mucosa | [ |
| Wilson disease (WD) | multi-organ manifestations involve the nervous system | Repeated oral candidiasis | [ |
| HSV-1 | Transmission in the CNS | Infection in the oral mucosa | [ |
| Tuberous sclerosis | Hamartoma formation in the nervous system | Hyperpigmented and hypopigmented macules affecting the oral mucosa | [ |
| Bacillary angiomatosis | CNS | BA lesions in the oral mucosa | [ |
| Cowden disease (CD) | CNS manifestations | Normal oral involvement | [ |
| Dettol liquid | CNS symptoms | Oral involvement | [ |
| Sweet’s diseases | [ | ||
| HSV-1 infection | Vagus nerve transmission | Oral manifestations | [ |
| Adamantiades–Behçet disease | Lesions of ulcerating systemic vasculitis in the CNS | Oral manifestations | [ |