1 / 67

Non specific disease of parotid

Non specific disease of parotid. Babak Saedi.MD Tehran university of Medical sciences Imam Khomeini Hospital. Anatomy & Physiology. Parotid Serous Sublingual Mucous Submandibular Mixed Minor salivary glands Controlled by sympathetic & parasympathetic . Acute & Chronic

lorant
Download Presentation

Non specific disease of parotid

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Non specific disease of parotid Babak Saedi.MD Tehran university of Medical sciences Imam Khomeini Hospital

  2. Anatomy & Physiology • Parotid • Serous • Sublingual • Mucous • Submandibular • Mixed • Minor salivary glands • Controlled by sympathetic & parasympathetic

  3. Acute & Chronic Non-Autoimmune Autoimmune Sialadenitis Necrotizing Sialametaplasia Sialadenosis Salivary Lymphoepithelial Cysts SALIVARY GLAND LESSIONS Non-Neoplastic Disease Benign Tumors Malignant Tumors Pleomorphic Adenomas Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma Basal Cell Adenomas Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma Myoepitheliomas Warthin’s Tumor Oncocytoma and Oncocytosis Sclerosing Polycystic Adenosis

  4. Sialadenosis • Non-specific term used to describe a non-inflammatory non-neoplastic enlargement of a salivary gland, usually the parotid. • May be called sialosis • The enlargement is generally asymptomatic • Mechanism is unknown in many cases.

  5. Sialadenosis (Sialosis) • Parotid glands most commonly. • Probably due to abnormalities of neurosecretory control.

  6. Sialadenosis (Sialosis) • Cause maybe due to: • Nutritional (Alcoholism, Cirrhosis, Kwashiorkor and Pellagra • Endocrine (Diabetes, Thyroid diasease, Gonadal dysfunction) • Neurochemical (Vegetative state, Lead, Mercury, Iodine, Thiouracil)

  7. Related to… • Metabolic “endocrine sialendosis” • Nutritional “nutritional mumps” • Obesity: secondary to fatty hypertrophy • Malnutrition: acinar hypertrhophy • Any condition that interferes with the absorption of nutrients (celiac dz, uremia, chronic pancreatitis, etc)

  8. Related to… • Alcoholic cirrhosis: likely based on protein deficiency & resultant acinar hypertrophy • Drug induced: iodine mumps e. HIV

  9. Sialadenosis (Sialosis) Histopathology: • Hypertrophy of serous acinar cells to about twice their normal size. • Cytoplasm is densely packed with secretory granules.

  10. Allergic sialadenitis • Caused by drugs or allergens • Clinical presentation: • Acute salivary gland enlargement • Itching over the gland • With/without rash • Treatment • Self-limiting • Avoid allergen • hydration

  11. Salivary gland

  12. ObstructiveSalivary Gland Disorders • Sialolithiasis • Mucous retention/extravasation

  13. Mucocele9 • Mucus is the exclusive secretory product of the accessory minor salivary glands and the most prominent product of the sublingual gland. • The mechanism for mucus cavity development is extravasation or retention

  14. Mucoceles & Ranula • Etiology • Trauma  extravasation labial mucosa • Obstruction  retention  palate & floor of mouth • Clinical appearance • Ranula • extravasation / retention in floor of mouth • Obstruction of Sublingual salivary gland duct • Usually unilateral

  15. Mucocele • Mucoceles, exclusive of the irritation fibroma, are most common of the benign soft tissue masses in the oral cavity. • Muco: mucus , coele: cavity. When in the oral floor, they are called ranula.

  16. Mucocele9 Extravasation is the leakage of fluid from the ducts or acini into the surrounding tissue. Extra: outside, vasa: vessel Retention: narrowed ductal opening that cannot adequately accommodate the exit of saliva produced, leading to ductal dilation and surface swelling. Less common phenomenon

  17. Mucocele • Consist of a circumscribed cavity in the connective tissue and submucosa producing an obvious elevation in the mucosa

  18. Mucocele • The majority of the mucoceles result from an extravasation of fluid into the surrounding tissue after traumatic break in the continuity of their ducts. • Lacks a true epithelial lining.

  19. Ranula9 • Is a term used for mucoceles that occur in the floor of the mouth. • The name is derived form the word rana, because the swelling may resemble the translucent underbelly of the frog.

  20. Ranula9 • Although the source is usually the sublingual gland, • may also arise from the submandibular duct • or possibly the minor salivary glands in the floor of the mouth.

  21. Ranula • Presents as a blue dome shaped swelling in the floor of mouth (FOM). • They tend to be larger than mucoceles & can fill the FOM & elevate tongue. • Located lateral to the midline, helping to distinguish it from a midline dermoid cyst.

  22. Plunging or Cervical Ranula • Occurs when spilled mucin dissects through the mylohyoid muscle and produces swelling in the neck. • Concomitant FOM swelling may or may not be visible.

  23. Treatment of Mucoceles9in Lip or Buccal mucosa • Excision with strict removal of any projecting peripheral salivary glands • Avoid injury to other glands during primary wound closure

  24. Ranula Treatment9 • Marsupialization has fallen into disfavor due to the excessive recurrence rate of 60-90% • Sublingual gland removal via intraoral approach

  25. Salivary gland

  26. Immunologic Disease Sjögren’s Syndrome7 • Most common immunologic disorder associated with salivary gland disease. • Characterized by a lymphocyte-mediated destruction of the exocrine glands leading to xerostomia and keratoconjunctivitis sicca

  27. Sjögren’s syndrome7 • 90% cases occur in women • Average age of onset is 50y • Classic monograph on thediease published in 1933 by Sjögren, a Swedish ophthalmologist

  28. SJOGREN’s SYNDROME All the above conditions plus; Dry eyes Generalized arthritis

  29. Primary SS - Clinical picture • Mostly parotid gland is affected • Persistent / intermittent gland enlargement • bilateral, non-tender, firm, and diffuse swelling •  saliva and altered saliva composition • Check of any recent changes to the character of the glands (nodularity) • significantly increased risk of developing B-cell lymphoma • Keratoconjunctivitissicca

  30. Secondary SS - Clinical picture • Dryness of the skin & pruritis • Dry and persistent cough • >50% have arthralgia with or without arthritis • Dysphagia, nausea, dyspepsia, and epigastric pain • Peripheral & cranial neuropathy

  31. Sjögren syndrome - Diagnosis • Different diagnostic criteria • Objective measurement of decreased salivary & lacrimal gland function • +ve autoimmune serologies • Minor salivary gland biopsy • Lymphocytic infiltration • Silagoraphy is also useful

  32. Sjögren’s Syndrome • Keratoconjuntivitissicca: diminished tear production caused by lymphocytic cell replacement of the lacrimal gland parenchyma. • Evaluate with Schirmer test. Two 5 x 35mm strips of red litmus paper placed in inferior fornix, left for 5 minutes. A positive finding is lacrimation of 5mm or less. Approximately 85% specific & sensitive

  33. Sjögren’s Lip Biopsy15 • Biopsy of SG mainly used to aid in the diagnosis • Can also be helpful to confirm sarcoidosis

  34. Sjögren’s Lip Biopsy15 • Single 1.5 to 2cm horizantal incision labial mucosa. • Not in midline, fewer glands there. • Include 5+ glands for identification • Glands assessed semi-quantitatively to determine the number of foci of lymphocytes per 4mm2/gland

  35. Sjögren syndrome - Treatment • Symptomatic • Systemic cholinergic (Pilocarpine) • 5mg TID/QID (should not exceed 30mg/day) • Follow up

  36. Sjögren’s Treatment15 • Avoid xerostomic meds if possible • Avoid alcohol, tobacco (accentuates xerostomia) • Sialogogue (eg:pilocarpine) use is limited by other cholinergic effects like bradycardia & lacrimation • Sugar free gum or diabetic confectionary • Salivary substitutes/sprays

  37. MICKULICZ’s SYNDROME 1) Symmetrical enlargement of salivary glands 2) Enlargement of the lachrymal glands 3) Dry mouth

  38. Radiation induced pathology • Permanent salivary damage caused by doses 50Gy • Radioactive iodine for thyroid cancer treatment has similar but less severe effect • Clinical presentation • Salivary gland dysfunction signs & symptoms • Osteonecrosis • Increased risk of tumors affecting radiated tissues

  39. Management steps for patients with radiation-induced xerostomia

  40. Radiation Injury7 • Low dose radiation (1000cGy) to a salivary gland causes an acute tender and painful swelling within 24hrs. • Serous cells are especially sensitive and exhibit marked degranulation and disruption.

  41. Continued irradiation leads to complete destruction of the serous acini and subsequent atrophy of the gland7. • Similar to the thyroid, salivary neoplasm are increased in incidence after radiation exposure7.

  42. Granulomatous Disease7 Primary Tuberculosis of the salivary glands: • Uncommon, usually unilateral, parotid most common affected • Believed to arise from spread of a focus of infection in tonsils • Secondary TB may also involve the salivary glands but tends to involve the SMG and is associated with active pulmonary TB.

  43. 6- Granulomatous conditions • Tuberculosis • Granulation tissue formation in salivary gland • Xerostomia • Salivary gland enlargement • Sarcoidosis • Granulomas (T lymphocytes) affecting several organs • Lungs • Skin • Eyes • Parotid glands • Severity and duration of disease varies • Mild improvement noticed with steroid therapy

  44. Granulomatous conditions • Tuberculosis • Granulation tissue formation in salivary gland • Xerostomia • Salivary gland enlargement • Sarcoidosis • Granulomas (T lymphocytes) affecting several organs • Lungs • Skin • Eyes • Parotid glands • Severity and duration of disease varies • Mild improvement noticed with steroid therapy

  45. Granulomatous Disease7 Sarcoidosis: a systemic disease characterized by noncaseating granulomas in multiple organ systems • Clinically, SG involvement in 6% cases • Heerfordts’s disease is a particular form of sarcoid characterized by uveitis, parotid enlargement and facial paralysis. Usually seen in 20-30’s. Facial paralysis transient.

  46. Granulomatous Disease7 Cat Scratch Disease: • Does not involve the salivary glands directly, but involves the periparotid and submandibular triangle lymph nodes • May involve SG by contiguous spread. • Bacteria is Bartonella Henselae(G-R) • Also, toxoplasmosis and actinomycosis.

  47. Cysts7 True cysts of the parotid account for 2-5% of all parotid lesions May be acquired or congenital Type 1 Branchial arch cysts are a duplication anomaly of the membranous external auditory canal (EAC) Type 2 cysts are a duplication anomaly of the membranous and cartilaginous EAC

  48. Cysts Acquired cysts include: • Mucus extravasation vs. retention • Traumatic • Benign epithelial lesions • HIV • Association with tumors • Pleomorphic adenoma • Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma • Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma • Warthin’s Tumor

  49. Other: Pneumoparotitis • In the absence of gas-producing bacterial parotitis, gas in the parotid duct or gland is assumed to be due to the reflux of pressurized air from the mouth into Stensen’s duct. • May occur with episodes of increased intrabuccal pressure • Glass blowers, trumpet players • Aka: pneumosialadenitis, wind parotitis, pneumatocele glandulae parotis

  50. Pneumoparotitis8 • Crepitation, on palpation of the gland • Swelling may resolve in minutes to hours, in some cases, days. • US and CT show air in the duct and gland • Consider antibiotics to prevent superimposed infection

More Related