1. Oral Hairy Leukoplakia in a Patient with Systemic Primary Amyloidosis: A Case Report.
- Author
-
de Fátima Correia-Silva, Jeane, Gonçalves Resende, Renata, Lodi, Fernanda Maia, Conn, Brendan, Alves Mesquita, Ricardo, and Santiago Gomez, Ricardo
- Subjects
ORAL leukoplakia ,IMMUNODEFICIENCY ,AMYLOIDOSIS - Abstract
Oral hairy leukoplakia is characterized by an asymptomatic white plaque on the lateral borders of the tongue. It is associated with immunodeficiency, principally to Human Immunodeficiency virus infection, but it has also been reported in patients with other immunosuppressed states. A 48- year-old man with primary amyloidosis was referred to evaluate a white plaque on the tongue. Based on the patient's clinical presentation, medical history, and localization of the oral lesion, differential clinical diagnosis included amyloidosis, oral hairy leukoplakia, idiopathic leukoplakia, hyperplastic chronic candidiasis, and uremic stomatitis. The diagnosis of oral hairy leukoplakia was confirmed by histopathological analysis and in situ hybridization showing Epstein-Barr virus. This is an unusual clinical presentation of oral hairy leukoplakia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014