Term
Mucous Membrane Disorders Often present as ____ lesions or ulcers and erosions. Biopsy lesions and nonhealing ulcers/erosion to rule out ____ |
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Definition
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Term
_____ = mucosal epithelium partly denuded |
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Definition
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Term
_______= extend through the epidermis into the underlying tissue, the lamina propria |
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Definition
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Term
white lesions ______ of the oral mucosa Thickened ____ appears white Malignancy must be ruled out |
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Definition
Hyperkeratosis stratum corneum |
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Term
_____ is superficial and will not leave a scar _____ will leave a scar |
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Definition
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Term
Most common cause of recurrent oral ulcers? |
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Definition
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis: Ulcers have a ____ base and peripheral ____. Multiple therapies indicate a lack of effective treatment |
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Definition
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Term
_____: Common, recurrent, idiopathic disorder of mouth presenting as small punched out ulcers. |
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Definition
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis Incidence: |
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Definition
Common, 20-60% general population. Most common cause of oral ulceration. |
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis History: precipitated by ____ (biting, misguided toothbrush), emotional stress, prodrome __ day prior of discomfort in area, ulcers ____, especially with eating |
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Definition
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis Physical Examination: 2-5 mm round, ________ ulcers with a yellowish necrotic surface and surrounding _____. Single or multiple, found on ____ and ____ mucosa. |
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Definition
punched out erythema buccal labial |
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis Differential Diagnosis: (1)____ - which rarely recurs inside mouth. (2)____ -has triad of oral ulcerations, genital ulcerations, and ocular inflammation (iridocyclitis). (3)____ , e.g. Ulcerative colitis |
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Definition
herpes simplex Behcet’s syndrome Inflammatory bowel disease |
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis Laboratory and Biopsy: ____ not needed, will show ulceration and nonspecific ulceration. Get ____ - questionable association with ____ or ____ deficient anemia. |
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Definition
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis Therapy: Treatment can be difficult. Correct ____ if present _______ swish and swallow Topical steroids, e.g. ______in Orabase, intralesional injections for large ulcers Oral steroids for severe incapacitating disease Topical anesthetics, e.g. viscous ____ |
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Definition
anemia Tetracycline triamcinolone Xylocaine |
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis Course and Complications: Minor cases spontaneously heal in 4-14 days Major ulcers can take as long as 6 weeks If lasts longer than ___ weeks, biopsy to rule out malignancy ____ are common- occasional to almost continuous Usually eventually remits- may take 5 to 15 years or longer |
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Definition
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Term
Aphthous Stomatitis Pathogenesis: (5) |
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Definition
Emotional and physical stress Hormones Infection Autoimmunity Circulating T lymphocytes cytotoxic against oral mucosa |
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Term
Thrush (Oral Candidiasis) Common in _____ & _______ adults Appears as ____ patches that easily scrape off Treat with topical or oral ___ |
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Definition
newborns & immunosuppressed white antifungals |
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Term
______: Infection of the oral epithelium with Candida albicans- appears white and can be scraped off leaving an inflamed base. |
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Definition
Thrush (Oral Candidiasis) |
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Term
Thrush (Oral Candidiasis)Incidence most common in ___ ____ wearers ____ patients |
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Definition
newborns Denture Immunosuppressed |
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Term
Thrush (Oral Candidiasis) History Mothers of infected newborns usually have ____ candidiasis Predisposing factors: (4) |
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Definition
vaginal
Dentures Steroids, e.g. aerosolized inhalers for asthma Antibiotics immunosuppression |
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Term
Thrush also occurs in patients with __________, a rare disorder in which chronic mucous membrane infection is accompanied by skin and nail involvement. |
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Definition
chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis |
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Term
Thrush (Oral Candidiasis) Physical Examination White curd like material on ____ & ____ mucosa- can be easily scraped off leaving a ____ base Remove dentures if present to evaluate Angles of mouth may be involved, called ______. Confirm with _____ |
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Definition
tongue and buccal erythematous angular cheilitis KOH preparation |
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Term
Thrush Differential Diagnosis (1) |
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Definition
Lichen Planus- not easily scraped off like thrush |
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Term
Thrush Laboratory and Biopsy KOH preparation- slide will show ___ & ____ If no predisposing factors (dentures/antibiotics/steroid inhalers), rule out ____ infection |
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Definition
hyphae and pseudohyphae HIV |
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Term
Thrush Therapy
Infants and Children None ____ suspension swish and swallow ____ oral suspension
Adults _____ swish and swallow _____ (Sporanox) swish and swallow Oral _____ Oral _____ Soak acrylic dentures in dilute ____ solution, use ____ for metal partial dentures |
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Definition
Nystatin Fluconazole
Nystatin Itraconazole Fluconazole Ketoconazole Peridex Clorox |
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Term
Thrush Course and Complications Spontaneously clears in ___, use medication to speed healing ____therapy to treat recurrent and chronic infections in immunocompromised patients Complications uncommon |
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Definition
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Term
Thrush Pathogenesis: Pathogenesis of candidal infections is discussed in CH 12. |
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Definition
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Term
Lichen Planus: Characteristic ____ pattern on buccal mucosa Diagnosis confirmed by ___ _____ to treatment |
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Definition
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Term
Lichen Planus Definition Oral lesions occur alone or with ___ lesions Oral lesions characterized by ___ and ____ - lesions most commonly in the form reticulated papules and lines that assume a ____ pattern Erosive lichen planus is a less common variant Origin unknown |
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Definition
skin inflammation & hyperkeratosis lace like |
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Term
Lichen Planus Incidence most common cause of ____ lesions in the mouth. 0.5%-1% of patients at the dentist Highest incidence in ____--____ year olds |
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Definition
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Term
Lichen Planus History Drugs: (4) Drugs can be causative Usually no symptoms Erosive type ____, especially with eating Accompanying skin lesions usually ___ |
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Definition
quinidine quinicrine sulfonylureas tetracycline
painful pruritic |
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Term
Lichen Planus Physical Examination Reticulated lace like pattern, especially ___ mucosa, is characteristic ____ lesions accompany oral lichen planus in up 40% of cases |
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Definition
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Term
Lichen Planus Differential Diagnosis (1) _____ - scrapes off easily and hyphae & pseudohyphae found on KOH slide (2) _____ - Rule out with biopsy (3) _____ -Rule out with serologic test. Likely will have accompanying rash, fever, lymphadenopathy |
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Definition
Candidiasis Leukoplakia Secondary syphilis |
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Term
Lichen Planus Laboratory and Biopsy Clinically diagnoses based on the characteristic ___ pattern Biopsy is diagnostic Biopsy shows ___ |
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Definition
reticulated hyperkeratosis |
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Term
Lichen Planus Therapy: More resistant to treatment than ___ lesions Asymptomatic lesions requires no therapy Topical therapy: steroids (e.g. ___ gel 0.05%), ____ gel 0.024%, ____ solution Intralesional ____ (Kenalog) injections Systemic therapy reserve for extremely severe disease (3) |
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Definition
skin fluocinonide Tretinoin Cyclosporine triamcinolone
Prednisone Acitretin cyclosporine |
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Term
______ White plaques that can signify cancer |
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Definition
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Term
Leukoplakia: indurated ___ plaques that require biopsy. ____ is the most frequent cause |
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Definition
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Term
Leukoplakia Definition: White patch or plaque with pathologic epithelial ____ White color due to macerated ____ Hyperkeratosis due to ____, e.g. dentures, ragged teeth, but most often cigarette smoking or chewing tobacco |
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Definition
dysplasia hyperkeratosis irritation |
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Term
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Definition
Uncommon, primarily middle aged and the elderly |
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Term
Leukoplakia History Onset is ____ and usually asymptomatic May be irritated and thus seek medical attention Most patients use ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Leukoplakia Physical Examination White patch or plaque on mucous membrane Surface ___ or ____ Pure white to gray Located anywhere in the mouth, ____ most common ALL WHITE PLAQUES SHOULD BE _____ _____ AREAS MUST BE EXAMINED BY BIOPSY TO RULE OUT CANCER |
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Definition
flat or verrucous tongue PALPATED INDURATED |
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Term
Leukoplakia Differential Diagnosis - depends on biopsy (1) ____- distinctive reticulated lacy pattern (2) ____ - usually had rash and other constitutional symptoms (3) ____ - a hereditary condition that begins in child hood, appears spongy (4) ____ - a diagnosis of exclusion (5) ____ - affects the sides of the tongue and occurs almost exclusively in AIDS patients and is cause by infection with Epstein-Barr virus. |
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Definition
Lichen planus Secondary syphilis White sponge nevus Leukokeratosis Oral hairy leukoplakia |
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Term
Oral hairy leukoplakia is associated with ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Leukoplakia Laboratory and Biopsy Histopathology includes hyperkeratosis, acanthosis, and inflammation Epithelial changes similar to actinic keratosis Cellular pleomorphism Increased mitotic figures Derangement of usual orderly architectural pattern of stratified epithelium Carcinoma in situ when entire thickness of epithelium has dysplastic changes Invasion into the lamina propria signifies squamous cell carcinoma |
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Definition
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Term
Leukoplakia Therapy: Cessation of ___ use Eliminate source of ___ trauma _____ of superficial lesions - Cryosurgery - Carbon dioxide laser - Shave excision Topical _____ Systemic _____ Excision is cancer is suspected |
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Definition
tobacco physical Ablation bleomycin retinoids |
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Term
Leukoplakia Course and Complications ________ develops in 30% of patients with dysplastic leukoplakia May spontaneously resolve when aggravating factor are withdrawn |
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Definition
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Term
Leukoplakia Pathogenesis Induced by chronic, mild irritation from physical, chemical, or inflammatory processes ____ most common cause- heat may also contribute ____ implicated in some cases |
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Definition
Smoking Human papillomavirus |
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Term
____ & ____ are autoimmune chronic blistering diseases with prominent or predominant mucosal involvement. ___ 90% have oral lesions, 50% of the time the lesions begin in the mouth. Fragile blisters are easily broken so ____ are the usual finding. ______ are directed against mucosal epithelia Diagnosis via _____ of biopsied mucosa |
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Definition
Pemphigus vulgaris & mucous membrane pemphigoid (aka cicatricial pemphigoid) Pemphigus vulgaris erosions Autoantibodies direct immunofluorescence |
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Term
Herpes: Accompanied by ___ and regional ___ and lasts for 2-3 weeks. Herpetic gingivostomatitis Often accompanied by lesions on the lips and perioral skin |
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Definition
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Term
Coxsackievirus A-__ strain causes herpangia Vesicular eruption in the back of the ___ lasting 7-10 days A-__ strain causes hand, foot and mouth disease Distinctive disorder characterized by small "____" shaped vesicles in the ___ and accompanied by similar lesions on the palms and soles |
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Definition
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Term
Syphilis Primary lesion is a ____ Appears as a single, ___ , punched-out ulcer and characteristically feels ____. Dark field examination of an oral chancre must be interpreted with caution as nontreponemal spirochetes normally colonize the mouth. If doubt exists, get a VDRL or RPR. If result is negative retest in ___ month |
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Definition
chancre painless indurated one |
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Term
Histoplasmosis Oral ulcerations occur ____ in patients with disseminated systemic fungal infections ___ with special stains and cultures confirms the diagnosis |
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Definition
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Term
CANCER Most common cause is ___ carcinoma Intraoral squamous cell carcinoma more likely to metastasize than ____ squamous cell carcinoma ___ & ___ can also cause oral ulcers Malignant tumors in the mouth can erode and result in ___ Lesions are characteristically indurated- _____! Biopsy is diagnostic |
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Definition
squamous cell cutaneous Lymphomas and leukemias ulceration palpate |
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Term
Select the description most consistent with thrush (oral candidiasis). Round, punched-out ulcer with a white-yellow necrotic surface. White curd-like plaques that are easily scraped off. Reticulate, lace-like pattern of lines and papules on buccal mucosa. White and ulcerated nodule with a hard, indurated base. Ulcerated lesions, often with vesicles and ulcers of the outer lip. |
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Definition
White curd-like plaques that are easily scraped off. |
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Term
2. What is the most common origin of leukoplakia? Smoking Dentures Ragged teeth Cold beverages Bacterial Overgrowth |
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Definition
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Term
3. What is the most common cause of oral ulceration? Lichen planus Leukoplakia Thrush (oral candidiasis) Aphthous stomatitis Smoking |
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Definition
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Term
4. Select the description most consistent with aphthous stomatitis Round, punched-out ulcer with a white-yellow necrotic surface. White curd-like plaques that are easily scraped off. Reticulate, lace-like pattern of lines and papules on buccal mucosa. White and ulcerated nodule with a hard, indurated base. Vesicles and erosions |
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Definition
Round, punched-out ulcer with a white-yellow necrotic surface. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis |
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Term
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Definition
cosxackievirus A16 hand foot & mouth disease |
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Term
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Definition
coxsackievirus A4 herpangia |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
pemphigus vulgaris & mucous membrane pemphigoid |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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