• About
  • Editorial Board
  • Current Issue
  • Early access
  • Archive
Search
EJPD
  • About
  • Editorial Board
  • Current Issue
  • Early access
  • Archive
  • Sioi
  • Guidelines for Authors
  • Article submission
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy
Home Oral lesions as first clinical manifestations of Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients:...

Oral lesions as first clinical manifestations of Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients: a report on 8 cases

Authors:

  • G. Favia
    Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine, Aldo Moro University Bari, Italy
  • L. Limongelli
    Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine, Aldo Moro University Bari, Italy
  • A. Tempesta
    Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine, Aldo Moro University Bari, Italy
  • E. Maiorano
    Department of Emergency and Organ Transplantation, Aldo Moro University Bari, Italy
  • S. Capodiferro
    Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine, Aldo Moro University Bari, Italy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.23804/ejpd.2020.21.01.13

ABSTRACT


Aim

Oro-facial granulomatosis is a descriptive term commonly encompassing a variety of conditions that exhibit similar clinical and microscopic features. It is generally used to describe persistent enlargement of the soft tissues of the oral and maxillofacial region.

Methods

We report on the salient clinical features of 8 cases of Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients (age range from 9 to 13 years old), with oral lesions as first clinical manifestations.

Results

The clinical presentation of oro-facial granulomatosis is highly variable but usually recurrent facial swelling, mainly in the lips with or without intraoral manifestations, is the single most common clinical sign at onset. The association with systemic conditions such as sarcoidosis and Crohn’s disease has been widely reported in literature. In paediatric age, oro-facial granulomatosis may frequently represent an extra-intestinal manifestation of Crohn’s disease and oral lesions can be the first sign of an unknown intestinal disease. The diagnosis in paediatric patients is challenging as oro-facial granulomatosis may precede Crohn’s disease by several years, frequently remaining the only evident active focus of the disease.

Conclusion

The detection of specific oral manifestations often preceded by painless gingival enlargement (diffuse lip and buccal mucosal swelling, oral cobblestoning, buccal sulcus ulceration and mucosal tags) and/or unspecific or ancillary ones (cheilitis, scaly perioral erythematous rashes and frank intraoral abscess formation, labial and tongue fissuring, glossitis and aphthous stomatitis) is mandatory for the early diagnosis of intestinal Crohn’s disease.

PLUMX METRICS

Download PDF

Publication date:

March /2020

Keywords:

crohn’s disease, inflammatory bowel diseases, oral crohn’s disease, orofacial granulomatosis

Issue:

Vol.21 – n.1/2020

Page:

66 – 69

Publisher:

Ariesdue

Cite:


Harvard: G. Favia, L. Limongelli, A. Tempesta, E. Maiorano, S. Capodiferro (2020) "Oral lesions as first clinical manifestations of Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients: a report on 8 cases", European Journal of Paediatric Dentistry, 21(1), pp66-69. doi: 10.23804/ejpd.2020.21.01.13
Vancouver: G. Favia, L. Limongelli, A. Tempesta, E. Maiorano, S. Capodiferro. Oral lesions as first clinical manifestations of Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients: a report on 8 cases. European Journal of Paediatric Dentistry [Internet]. 2020Mar.1 [cited 2025May.24];21(1):66-69. Available from: https://www.ejpd.eu/abstract-pubmed/oral-lesions-as-first-clinical-manifestations-of-crohns-disease-in-paediatric-patients-a-report-on-8-cases/
MLA: G. Favia, L. Limongelli, A. Tempesta, E. Maiorano, S. Capodiferro Oral lesions as first clinical manifestations of Crohn’s disease in paediatric patients: a report on 8 cases. European Journal of Paediatric Dentistry. 2020;21(1):66-69

Copyright (c) 2021 Ariesdue

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Linkedin
WhatsApp
Email
Print
    webfactory.bm24
    Editor in chief: dott. Luigi Paglia
    European Journal of Paediatric Dentistry © | ISSN (Online): 2035-648X
    powered by Ariesdue

    CONTACT US
    • About
    • Editorial Board
    • Current Issue
    • Early access
    • Archive
    European Journal of Paediatric Dentistry © | ISSN (Online): 2035-648X
    Registrazione del Tribunale di Milano n. 285 del 14.04.1998 | ROC 1946 - 26.09.2001
    /* ----------------------------------------- */ /* Modello di contenuto: Abstracts PubMed - inizio */ /* ----------------------------------------- */ /* ----------------------------------------- */ /* Modello di contenuto: Abstracts PubMed - fine */ /* ----------------------------------------- */