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  2. Angular cheilitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_cheilitis

    Angular cheilitis is thought to be a multifactorial disorder of infectious origin, [10] with many local and systemic predisposing factors. [11] The sores in angular cheilitis are often infected with fungi (yeasts), bacteria, or a combination thereof; [8] this may represent a secondary, opportunistic infection by these pathogens.

  3. Morsicatio buccarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morsicatio_buccarum

    The most common and simple treatment is the construction of a specially made acrylic prosthesis that covers the biting surfaces of the teeth and protects the cheek, tongue, and labial mucosa (an occlusal splint). This is either employed in the short term as a habit-breaking intention or more permanently (e.g., wearing the prosthesis each night ...

  4. Cheilitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheilitis

    [citation needed] Chronic cheilitis simplex can progress to crusting and bleeding. [5] Lip licker's dermatitis, popularly known as perioral dermatitis, in a young male with a lip-licking habit. Note also deep fissures on lips. Counterintuitively, constant licking of the lips causes drying and irritation, and eventually the mucosa splits or ...

  5. List of skin conditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_skin_conditions

    Fissured tongue (furrowed tongue, lingua plicata, plicated tongue, scrotal tongue) Geographic tongue (benign migratory glossitis, benign migratory stomatitis, glossitis areata exfoliativa, glossitis areata migrans, lingua geographica, stomatitis areata migrans, transitory benign plaques of the tongue) Gingival fibroma; Gingival hypertrophy

  6. Sleep apnea: causes, symptoms, treatments, and how it ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/sleep-apnea-causes...

    Sleep apnea is a serious medical condition that causes interruptions in your sleep leading to a wide range of symptoms. ... tongue and neck can increase the risk of airway obstruction during sleep ...

  7. Burning mouth syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burning_mouth_syndrome

    Type 1 – Symptoms not present upon waking, and then increase throughout the day; Type 2 – Symptoms upon waking and through the day; Type 3 – No regular pattern of symptoms; Sometimes those terms specific to the tongue (e.g. glossodynia) are reserved for when the burning sensation is located only on the tongue. [21]

  8. Oral mucocele - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_mucocele

    The most common location to find a mucocele is the inner surface of the lower lip. It can also be found on the inner side of the cheek (known as the buccal mucosa), on the anterior ventral tongue, and the floor of the mouth. When found on the floor of the mouth, the mucocele is referred to as a ranula. They are rarely found on the upper lip.

  9. Mouth ulcer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouth_ulcer

    Diagramatic representation of mucosal erosion (left), excoriation (center), and ulceration (right) Simplistic representation of the life cycle of mouth ulcers. An ulcer (/ ˈ ʌ l s ər /; from Latin ulcus, "ulcer, sore") [2] is a break in the skin or mucous membrane with loss of surface tissue and the disintegration and necrosis of epithelial tissue. [3]