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Clinical Characteristics and Relevance of Oral Candida Biofilm in Tongue Smears.


ABSTRACT: Dimorphic Candida exist as commensal yeast carriages or infiltrate hyphae in the oral cavity. Here, we investigated the clinical relevance of Candida hyphae in non-pseudomembranous oral candidiasis (OC) by smears of tongue biofilms. We conducted a retrospective study of 2829 patients who had had tongue smears regardless of OC suspicion. Clinical characteristics were evaluated using a novel method of assessing hyphae. Clinical factors (moderate/severe stimulated pain, pain aggravated by stimulation, tongue dorsum appearance and initial topical antifungal use) were highly significant in the high-grade hyphae group but were statistically similar in the low-grade hyphae and non-observed hyphae group, suggesting low-grade hyphae infection as a subclinical OC state. In addition to erythematous candidiasis (EC), a new subtype named "morphologically normal symptomatic candidiasis" (MNSC) with specific pain patterns and normal tongue morphology was identified. MNSC had a significantly higher proportion of moderate and severe stimulated pain cases than EC. Low unstimulated salivary flow rate (<0.1 mL/min) was found to be a common risk factor in MNSC and EC. In non-pseudomembranous OC, pain patterns were dependent on Candida hyphae degree regardless of tongue dorsum morphology. Morphologic differences seen in high-grade hyphae infection were not associated with systemic diseases or nutritional deficiencies.

SUBMITTER: Cho E 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7912297 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Clinical Characteristics and Relevance of Oral <i>Candida</i> Biofilm in Tongue Smears.

Cho Eunae E   Park YounJung Y   Kim Ki-Yeol KY   Han Dawool D   Kim Hyun Sil HS   Kwon Jeong-Seung JS   Ahn Hyung-Joon HJ  

Journal of fungi (Basel, Switzerland) 20210122 2


Dimorphic <i>Candida</i> exist as commensal yeast carriages or infiltrate hyphae in the oral cavity. Here, we investigated the clinical relevance of <i>Candida</i> hyphae in non-pseudomembranous oral candidiasis (OC) by smears of tongue biofilms. We conducted a retrospective study of 2829 patients who had had tongue smears regardless of OC suspicion. Clinical characteristics were evaluated using a novel method of assessing hyphae. Clinical factors (moderate/severe stimulated pain, pain aggravate  ...[more]

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