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Ординатура / Офтальмология / Английские материалы / Sjögren's Syndrome Diagnosis and Therapeutics_Ramos-Casals, Stone, Moutsopoulos_2012.pdf
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6 Oral Involvement

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Parotid swelling, which occurs in 25–66% of patients with primary SS but rarely in secondary SS, commonly takes one of several forms [51]:

Mild, chronic, bilateral, and painless

Recurrent, bilateral, and painless

Recurrent, bilateral but asymmetric, and painless

Unilateral and painful. This presentation usually results from acute bacterial sialadenitis, a complication of SS but not a direct manifestation of the disease itself.

Massive and bilateral, associated with adenopathy. Such a presentation is often associated with the development of lymphoma.

The most common cause of chronic salivary gland swelling in SS is autoimmune sialadenitis, also termed myoepithelial sialadenitis (MESA) for benign lymphoepithelial lesion. MESA is characterized by persistent, painless, firm swelling of the major salivary glands that can be either unilateral or bilateral. The histopathology reveals lymphocytic and plasmacytic infiltrates, with “islands” of epithelium called “epimyothelial islands” composed of ductal and myoepithelial cells.

The risk of developing a lymphoma for a patient with primary SS is on the order of 4–10%. This has been estimated to be 44 times higher than that of the general population. Among patients with primary SS, the incidence of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma has been estimated to be 320 cases per 100,000 patient-years of followup [52]. Most lymphomas occur in the major salivary glands as extranodal marginal zone B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas and 80% are MALT lymphomas [53, 54]. The parotid gland is by far the most likely site of such malignancies [55]. Other issues related to the development of lymphoma in patients with SS are discussed elsewhere in this book.

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Key Websites (Accessed Dec 19, 2009)

http://www.drymouth.info/practitioner/sources.asp

Miller AV, Ranatunga SKM, Francis ML. Sjögren syndrome: differential diagnoses & workup. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/332125-diagnosis

Miller AV, Ranatunga SKM, Francis ML. Sjögren syndrome: treatment & medication. http:// emedicine.medscape.com/article/332125-treatment

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