Oral Pathology 2

A detailed illustration of the oral cavity highlighting areas affected by herpes infections, with a focus on educational elements and anatomical structures.

Oral Pathology Quiz: Test Your Knowledge!

Challenge your understanding of oral pathology with this comprehensive quiz! Covering a variety of topics related to oral herpes and its associated conditions, you can dive deep into your knowledge about important oral health issues.

  • Evaluate your grasp of clinical symptoms
  • Test your knowledge on herpes viruses
  • Learn about treatment principles and prevention
61 Questions15 MinutesCreated by CuringSmile42
. Fever blister គឺជា៖
Vesicle erupted by sun beam
Vesicle erupted by stress
Vesicle erupted by coolness
Vesicle erupted by trauma
Subclinical symptoms of Oral herpes គឺជា៖
Symptomដែលមាននៅលើធ្ម៝ញ
Symptomដែលមាននៅលើស្បែក
Symptomដែលមានលក្ឝណស្រាល
Symptomដែលមានលក្ឝណធ្ងន់ធ្ងរ
Herpes witlow គឺជា herpesដែលមាននៅលើ
���ាឝ់ និងឝំបន់ជុំវិញមាឝ់
���ៃ​ ជើង និងមាឝ់
���្រាមដៃ
���្រាមដៃ និងដងឝ្លួន
Recurrent herpetic infectionច្រើនកើឝុំមាននៅលើ
Lips, gengiva and palate
Facial area
Facial area and eye area
Trunk
���ូចម៉្ដ៝ចដែលហៅឝាSeropositive?
���ាន​Antibodyនៅក្នុងឈាម
���ានAntibodyនៅក្នុងកូនកណ្ដុរ
���ានAntibodyនៅក្នុងឝ្លើម
���ានAntibodyនៅក្នុងឝម្រងនោម
���្រោយពីមាន Primary infectionហើយ Herpes Simplex Virusបានសម្ងំលាក់ឝ្លួននៅក្នុង
Lymphatic ganglion
Nerve ganglion
Tumor
Blood
���្ឝ្រីដែលមានផ្ទៃពោះជិឝគ្រប់ឝែមាន Genital herpes outbreak។ព៝លឆ្លងទន្ល៝ឝ្រូវឝែ
���្លងទន្ល៝ឝាមធម្មឝានៅផ្ទះ
���្លងទន្ល៝ឝាមធម្មឝានៅផ្ទះហើយឆ្អើភ្លើង
���្លងទន្ល៝ឝាមធម្មឝានៅមន្ទីព៝ទ្យ
���្លងទន្ល៝ដោយវះកាឝ់
Herpes encephalitis មានរោគសញ្ញាដូចជា
Fever, behavioral changes and seizures
Fever, vomit and malay
Fever, headache and vertigo
Fever, pain in the ears and the eyes
Which of the following is contagious?:
Pemphigus
Acute herpetic gingivostomatitis
Recurrent aphthous stomatitis
Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis
. Principle treatment ស្រមាប់ Herpetic infection គួរប្រើ
Antiviral drugs
Antibiotics
Antiinflammatory drugs
Antihistaminic drugs
Incidence is highest in preschool children. Characterised by: pain on eating and drinking, high fever, may be bleeding from gums, extensive ulceration of the tongue, palate and buccal mucosa, cervical gland enlargement, dehydration due to refusal to eat or drink. It is a contagious disease that usually regresses spontaneously within 12 to 20 days
Keratitis
Primary Herpetic Gingivostomatitis
Herpes Labialis
Herpetic Whitlow
An infection of the skin and occasionally pulp space of the finger caused by herpes simplex type I virus. The fingertip is reddened, swollen and acutely tender. Vesicles form which then merge to give bullae. The bullae crust over and heal over the course of about a month. It can lead to vessel thrombosis distally with avascular necrosis of the phalanx.
Eczema Herpeticum
Herpes Labialis
Balanitis
Herpetic Whitlow
With regards to Herpes viruses, which of the following is FALSE?
May cause problems in pregnancy to mother or foetus
Usually establish persistent or latent infection - for life
None are associated with malignancy
Common and often cause mild or asymptomatic infection in early life
A patient who has been taking quantities of aspirin might show increased post-operative bleeding because aspirin inhibits:
Synthesis of thromboxane A2 and prevents platelet aggregation
Synthesis of prostacyclin and prevents platelet aggregation
Synthesis of prostaglandin and prevents production of blood platelets
Thrombin and prevents formation of the fibrin network
. Which drug is specific for Trigeminal Neuralgia
Diazepam
Carbamazepine (Tegretol)
Ergotamine
Phenytoin
He cells most frequently found In an inflammatory inflammatory are
Mast cells
Gaint cells
Lymphocyte
Neutrophils
Cold sores are caused by _____ virus.
Herpes simplex
Herpes zoster
Cytomegalovirus
Rubella
One of the following is not a histological feature associated with herpes simplex infection
Ballooning degeneration of cells
Lipshütz bodies
Subepithelial vesicle/bulla formation
Multinucleated giant
Herpetic whitlow is an infection of _____ with HSV 1
Finger
Abdomen
Genitals
Conjunctive
Canker sores is another name for
Herpetic gingivostomatitis
Shingles
Recurrent aphthous stomatitis
Chickenpox
The site where recurrent aphthous ulcer does not commonly occur is
Labial mucosa
Tongue
Gingiva
Soft palate
Which amongst the following skin diseases has a benign and a malignant form?
Lichen planus
Acanthosis nigricans
White sponge nevus
Warty dyskeratoma
Which virus is now believed to be the one responsible for causing Bell palsy?
Herpes simplex
Varicella zoster
Cytomegalovirus
Epstein-Barr
What would not cause an airway obstruction?
Laryngeal muscles paralysis
Flexion of the neck
Airway obstruction
Extension of the neck
In developing plaque; the adhesive polymer produced by streptococcus mutans is synthesis from:
Glucose
Fructose
Sucrose
Lactose
Plaque is considered as an infection because:
Antibiotic therapy prevents or stop its formation
Indication of bacterial activity
It is common to human
It is devoid of any problems to teeth and mouth
Uni-lateral swelling in the floor of the mouth occurs frequently with meal; what is the possible diagnosis?
Ranula
Sub-mandibular sialolith
Cyts
Mucocele
អ្វីជា Reye's syndrome?
Children who take aspirin or aspirincontaining products during viral infection
Children who take overdose of aspirin during viral infection
Children who take overdose of antibiotics during viral infection
Children who take overdose of analgesics during viral infection.
Chronic tonsillitis is almost always:
Virus and can last for long periods if untreated
Bacterial and can last for long periods if untreated
Candida and can last for long periods if untreated
Bacterial + virus and can last for long periods if untreated
Acute tonsillitis may either be caused by:
Bacterial (25% or viral (75%
Bacterial (50% or viral (50%
Bacterial (75% or viral (25%
Bacterial (5% or viral (95%
Hyperplastic lingual tonsils may resemble which of the following?
Epulis fissuratum
Lingual varicosities
Squamous cell carcinoma
Median rhomboid glossitis
The tonsillar lymph node is situated at the level of:
Angle of the mandible
C6 vertebrae
Jugulo-digastric crossing
Jugulo-omohyoid crossing
Incubation period 14-21 days. Most common in children aged 4-10 years. Rash may last 7-10 days. Lesions progress through macules and papules to vesicular eruptions which develop a crust and spontaneously heal.
HSV
VZV
EBV
CMV
Transmission is by droplets from upper respiratory tract lesions or contact from ruptured skin lesions
Varicella-zoster virus
Epstein-Barr virus
Cytomegalovirus
Human Kaposi Sarcomavirus
Vesicles or bullae of the mucous membrane or skin are seen in all the following except:
Herpes simplex
Herpes zoster
Agranulocytosis
Pemphigus
. Oral cytological smears are of No value in the diagnosis of:
Primary intraoral herpes simplex
Recurrent intraoral herpes simplex
Herpes zoster
Lipoma
Disorder of steroid will result in
Adrenal suppression
Delayed healing
Osteoporosis
All of the above
Which amongst the following diseases is capable of producing developmental alterations in teeth?
Tetanus
Chickenpox
Diphtheria
Syphilis
The mode of transmission of VZV infection is
Blood-borne
Water-borne
Animal vectors
Air-borne
A clinically similar condition called postherpetic neuralgia occurs after _________ infection
Chickenpox
Herpes simplex
Herpes zoster
Herpangina
Transmission is by close contact from oropharyngeal secretions, especially kissing
Varicella-zoster virus
Human Kaposi Sarcomavirus
Epstein-Barr virus
Cytomegalovirus
Which of the following is NOT associated with infectious mononucleosis?
Pharyngitis
Lymphadenopathy
Petechiae of the palate
Gingival enlargement
Trauma to which gland can result in facial paralysis?
Submandibular
Parotid
Sublingual
Palatal
What is strep throat?
Strep throat is a sore throat caused by VZV
Strep throat is a sore throat caused by EBV
Strep throat is a sore throat caused by CMV
Strep throat is a sore throat caused by streptococcus
���្វីជាquinsy?
Tonsillar abscess
Glaglion abscess
Pharyngeal abscess
Peritonsillar abscess
���្វីជាReye's syndrome?:
Children who take aspirin or aspirincontaining products during viral infection
Children who take overdose of aspirin during viral infection
Children who take overdose of antibiotics during viral infection.
Children who take overdose of analgesics during viral infection.
What is Lemierre’s syndrome?:
The infection may spread beyond the tonsil resulting in inflammation
Infection of the internal jugular vein giving rise to a spreading septicemia infection
Infection causing inflammation signs
infection in pharynx and in the chest
. Papillary hyperplasia under a denture is usually due to:
Candida albican
Ill-fitting denture
allergy to denture material
Bacterial infection
All of the following are well documented initiating factors of hairy tongue EXCEPT:
Candidiasis
mouth rinses
Antibiotics
radiotherapy to the head and neck
The term used to describe epithelial changes including nuclear hyperchromatism, loss of increased nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio and abnormal mitoses is:
Hyperkeratosis
Dysplasia
Parakeratosis
Hyperparakeratosis
A smooth, elevated, red patch devoid of filiform papillae, located in the midline of the dorsum of the tongue immediately anterior to the circumvallate papillae is indicative of:
benign migratory glossitis
median rhomboid glossitis
a granular cell tumor
iron deficiency anemia
N regards to Plummer-Vincent syndrome or “Paterson and Kelly syndrome”:
Iron deficiency is a feature
Atrophic oral and gastric mucosa
Dysphagia and angular cheilitis
All of the above
How would you treat Denture Stomatitis:
Tetracycline
Systemic penicillin
Nystatin
Corticosteroid
Diagnosis of oral candidiasis (candidosis) is BEST confirmed by:
Microscopic examination of smears
Biopsy
Blood count
Serological exam
Which of the following is contagious?
Pemphigus
Acute herpetic gingivostomatitis
Recurrent aphthous stomatitis
Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis
The redness of inflamed gingiva is due to:
The degree of keratinization
Subgingiva deposit
Increase vasodilatation
Increase collagen fiber density
All of the following are keratinised EXCEPT of:
Palatal epithelium
Alveolar mucosa
Free gingiva
Attached gingiva
Contact stomatitis may be caused by:
dentifrice
Lipstick
Antibiotics
all of the above
Nystatin is the drug of choice for:
aphthous stomatitis
Candidiasis
periodontal abscess
necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis (NUG)
Gonococcus stomatitis has symptomes:
Purulent gingivitis
Diffused erythema
Ulcerative lesions and Glossitis
Purulent gingivitis, Diffused erythema, Ulcerative lesions and Glossitis
Purulent stomatitis caused by:
Staphylococus and Streptococus
Staphylococus and DNA Virus
Staphylococus and RNA Virua
Staphylococus and Candida
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