Candidiasis
Candidal species are carried as normal oral commensals by 50% of the population. Candida albicans is the most frequently isolated strain and can cause a spectrum of lesions.
Predisposing factors:
Local factors
- Xerostomia from drugs or radiotherapy
- Antibiotic therapy, particularly broad-spectrum agents
- Corticosteroids
- Heavy Smoking
- Dental appliances
Systemic factors
- Poorly controlled diabetes mellitus (neutrophil leukocyte defects)
- Extremes of age
- Nutritional deficiencies – Iron, Vitamin B12, Folic acid
- Immunosuppressive drugs – corticosteroids, cytotoxic chemotherapy
- Immunodeficiency – Hereditary / Acquired (HIV)
Classidication of Candidiasis:
Acute Candidiasis
- Pseudomembranous (Thrush)
White/creamy plaques, easy to wipe off – leaves erythematous base
Often palate – junction hard/soft, fauces. Can be chronic if immunocompromised
- Erythematous/Atrophic
Presents as red lesions. Can be seen in :-
Denture-related stomatitis (mild inflammation and erythema of mucosa beneath denture, usually asymptomatic)
AB-induced stomatitis (generalised mucosal erythema following broad-spectrum antibiotics, eliminates normal oral flora)
Median Rhomboid glossitis (depapillated rhomboidal area in centre line of dorsum of tongue, anterior to circumvallate papillae, usually asymptomatic)
Chronic Candidiasis
- Hyperplastic (Candidal Leukoplakia)
Persistent white lesions, often at commissures or buccal mucosa, cannot rub off, 50% speckled, varying levels of epithelial dysplasia and recognised risk of malignant transformation (between 9 and 40%).
- Mucocutaneous Candidiasis (CMC) Syndromes
Localised – oesophagitis, iron deficiency with persistent oral candidiasis
Diffuse (Candida Granuloma) – granulomas, susceptibility to bacterial infections,
Endocrinopathy Syndrome – pernicious anaemia, hypoparathyroidism, hypoadrenocorticism, diabetes
Thymoma – myasthenia gravis, aplastic anaemia, defect of cell mediated immunity
- Erythematous/Atrophic
Angular Stomatitis/Cheilitis
Multifactorial cause:- skin folding due to age, diabetes mellitus, nutritional deficiencies, denture wearing
Inflammation at commissures of lips, erythema possibly with yellow crusting
Rx. intra-oral infection of candida
Miconazole gel/cream effective for candida and staph. and strep., Fusidic acid cream effective for staph. aureus
Diagnostic tests
- A smear from the affected region should be taken and stained (Gram’s stain or PAS) - see candida hyphae
- A swab and an oral rinse should also be taken and sent for culture
- Biopsy and histopathological examination is necessary to confirm chronic hyperplastic candidiasis – examine for possible dysplasia
Management
- VITAL to consider why candidal infection has arisen – underlying systemic conditions? Always consider HIV in adult male where no other detectable cause
- Control of any local causes/predisposing factors —antibiotic therapy, anaemia, xerostomia, folic acid deficiencies, smoking, may be enough to resolve the lesions.
- Topical use of antifungals – Nystatin pastilles/suspension, or Amphotericin lozenges should allow the oral microflora to return to normal.
- Miconazole gel can be coated onto the base of the denture, TDS, while the denture is being worn, for denture-induced stomatitis, and continued 1—2 weeks, until the inflammation has cleared and C.albican is eliminated.
- Elimination of C.albicans from the denture base is important and can be achieved by soaking the denture in 0.1% hypochlorite overnight. Topical anti-fungals can only gain access to the palate if the patient leaves their dentures out while the tablets are allowed to dissolve in the mouth.
- Systemic Itraconazole and Fluconazole, can be used for resistant cases.
