Geographic Tongue




Patient Story



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A 4-year-old girl is brought to the pediatrician’s office because the mother is concerned about her child’s tongue having a “strange appearance.” She denies pain or discomfort and is unsure how long the lesions have been present. The lesions seem to change areas of distribution on the tongue. The examination reveals large, well-delineated, shiny and smooth, erythematous spots on the surface of the tongue (Figure 35-1). The diagnosis is geographic tongue (benign migratory glossitis). The physician explains that it is benign and that no treatment is needed unless symptoms develop.




FIGURE 35-1


Geographic tongue (benign migratory glossitis) in a 4-year-old girl. Note the pink continent among the white ocean. (Used with permission from Richard P. Usatine, MD.)






Introduction



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Geographic tongue is a recurrent, benign, usually asymptomatic, inflammatory disorder of the mucosa of the dorsum and lateral borders of the tongue. Geographic tongue is characterized by circinate, irregularly shaped erythematous patches bordered by a white keratotic band. The central erythematous patch represents loss of filiform papillae of tongue epithelium. Geographic tongue can, although rarely, present as symptomatic.




Synonyms



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Benign migratory glossitis or geographic stomatitis.




Epidemiology



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  • Geographic tongue has an estimated prevalence of 1 to 3 percent of the population.1



  • It may occur in either children or adults and exhibits a female predilection.



  • Geographic tongue in the US has a greater prevalence among white and black persons than among Mexican Americans.2





Etiology and Pathophysiology



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  • Geographic tongue is a common oral inflammatory condition of unknown etiology.



  • Some studies have shown an increased frequency in patients with allergies, pustular psoriasis, stress, type 1 diabetes, fissured tongue, and hormonal disturbances.3



  • Histopathologic appearance resembles psoriasis.4





Diagnosis



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Clinical Features




  • The diagnosis is made by visual inspection and history of the lesion. The lesions are suggestive of a geographic map (hence geographic tongue) with pink continents surrounded by whiter oceans (Figure 35-1).



  • Geographic tongue consists of large, well-delineated, shiny, and smooth, erythematous patches surrounded by a white halo (Figure 35-2).



  • Tongue lesions exhibit central erythema because of atrophy of the filiform papillae and are usually surrounded by slightly elevated, curving, white-to-yellow elevated borders (Figures 35-1 and 35-2).



  • The condition typically waxes and wanes over time so the lesions appear to be migrating (hence migratory glossitis).



  • Lesions may last days, months, or years. The lesions do not scar.



  • Most patients are asymptomatic, but some patients may complain of pain or burning, especially when eating spicy foods.



  • Suspect systemic intraoral manifestations of psoriasis or reactive arthritis if the patient has psoriatic skin lesions or has conjunctivitis, urethritis, arthritis, and skin involvement suggestive of reactive arthritis.


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Dec 31, 2018 | Posted by in PEDIATRICS | Comments Off on Geographic Tongue

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