[Tongue root lymphoma image] _Characteristics _Features

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Tongue root lymphoma image

There are many symptoms in everyone’s mouth, and the treatment of oral diseases is different from other regions, and cannot be treated arbitrarily with medication. After all, the symptoms are in the mouth, so everyone should be very careful about oral problems. What we are talking about today is oral lymphoma, a problem that may not be widespread, and it is more complex to treat. Attention should also be paid to taste and health in nutrition.

Pathophysiological causes of oral lymphoma:

The etiology of malignant lymphoma is considered to be closely related to viral infection, such as the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) with Burkitt lymphoma, where over 90% of cases can find EBV nuclear antigens in tumor reproductive cells; the titration of EBV antigens in patient red blood cells is also significantly elevated. In addition, infection with human T-lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1) is also related to the occurrence of malignant lymphoma.

In recent years, the increase in malignant lymphoma cases has also been considered to be closely related to a decrease in body resistance. For example, congenital immunodeficiency diseases (such as Bloom syndrome, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome), AIDS, post-cardiac transplantation, and autoimmune diseases (such as sjogren syndrome, SLE) can lead to secondary malignant lymphoma.

Disease diagnosis

Malignant lymphoma needs to be distinguished from various aspects of malignant reticulosis, a disease characterized by the proliferation of porous structures. Malignant reticulosis is a symptom of the proliferation of the skin’s porous system. Due to its diverse clinical manifestations, it is easy to be confused with malignant lymphoma, and diagnosis is generally difficult. Although the symptoms of malignant reticulosis are systemic, in the early stage, the lesions are generally localized in several hematopoietic organs, thereby spreading widely throughout the body. The clinical characteristics are persistent fever, liver and spleen enlargement, lymph node enlargement, leukopenia, progressive anemia, bleeding, and the appearance of petechiae and infiltrative hard nodules on the mucosa and skin. Swelling, hard nodules, ulcers, or bleeding may occur in the oral and maxillofacial region. However, the important diagnostic basis is the discovery of abnormal porous reproductive cells and various blood cell phagocytosis in the blood, bone marrow, and lymph node biopsy.

After understanding the pathophysiological causes of oral lymphoma, it is necessary to relieve the condition of oral lymphoma according to the causes, and once such symptoms appear, patients will experience obvious symptoms. Therefore, treatment cannot be delayed, as delaying treatment time can cause significant damage to the body, which should be noted.