Aging and Diseases of the Salivary Glands
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Transcript Aging and Diseases of the Salivary Glands
Aging and Diseases of the
Salivary Glands
Biology of Salivary Glands
Domenica G. Sweier DDS
June 4, 2003
Saliva
Frustrating for the dental team yet necessary
for the patient!
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When there is not Enough
Too little saliva can significantly alter a
person’s quality of life and the morbidity
associated with multiple systemic
conditions
• How little is too little?
• What affects the quality and quantity of saliva
production and flow?
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Objective vs Subjective
Objective
• Major gland secretions
Resting flow rate with a
Carlson-Crittenden Cup
• Minor gland secretions
• Whole saliva
Stimulated flow rate
with citric acid, wax
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Subjective
• Complaints of dry
mouth (xerostomia)
• Questionnaire
• Thirst
• The “cracker” test
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Xerostomia
Commonly referred to as “dry mouth”
Diminished salivary flow rate, typically
accepted as a 50% decrease in the clinically
determined rate in healthy individuals not
taking medications
• Resting Flow Rate 0.3-0.4 ml/min
• Stimulated Flow Rate 1-2 ml/min
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Clinical Signs/Symptoms of
Xerostomia
Dryness of mucous
membranes
Tongue fissuring and
lobulation (scrotal tongue)
Angular cheilosis/cheilitis
Fungal infections
Prosthesis-induced
stomatitis
Amputation caries
Thick, ropey saliva
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Dysphagia
Dysgeusia
Difficulty eating/speaking/
wearing prosthesis
Swelling of the salivary
glands
Difficulty expressing
saliva
Cheek biting
Persistent need for fluids
Burning tongue
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What Contributes to Xerostomia?
Aging
• Hormonal Changes/Menopause
Disease
• Local
• Systemic
Environmental Insults/Trauma
Medications
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Aging
Salivary Quantity in
Health
• No changes in major
secretions (parotid,
submandibular)
• No changes in minor
secretions
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Salivary Quality in
Health
• No general changes in
salivary constituents
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Aging
If the quality and quantity of saliva doesn’t
change with age, then what accounts for the
increased incidence of xerostomia and
associated morbidity among the elderly?
• Medications, diseases, and other environmental
insults affect both the quality and quantity of
saliva
An increase in incidence of these insults generally
associated with an increase in age
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Menopause
Average age of onset of menopause in USA is 50
years
Oral symptoms common, particularly among those
with systemic complaints
Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have
failed to provide significant and reproducible
evidence that salivary flow is affected by
menopause
• Oral complaints most likely the result of the types and
numbers of xerostomic medications taken
Anti-hypertensives, anti-depressants, and anti-histamines are
common in this group
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Diseases/Environmental Factors
Diseases
• Local
• Systemic
Environmental Factors
• Head and Neck Radiation
• Chemotherapy
• Medications
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Local Diseases
Tumors/Growths
• Benign
• Malignant
Obstructive Diseases
• Calculi, mucus plugs
• Unusual anatomy
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Inflammatory
Diseases
• Acute viral sialadenitis
• Acute and recurrent
bacterial sialadenitis
• Inflammation/Infection
secondary to systemic
disease
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Tumors/Growths
Primary benign and
malignant tumors
• Determine whether
benign or malignant
since they are treated
differently
• Incisional biopsy for
definitive diagnosis
• Smaller the involved
gland, more likely
malignant
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Malignant
• Seek medical attention for
swelling under the chin or
around the jawbone, if the
face becomes numb, facial
muscles do not move, or
there is persistent pain
• Usually treated with a
combination of surgery and
radiation
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Obstruction: Sialolithiasis
Calculi form in the duct, blocking the egress of
saliva
• Majority in submandibular gland
Painful swelling which increases at meal time
Bi-manual palpation in submandibular gland
X-ray, sialography, CT, ultrasound
Analgesics, try to push stone out, may need to
dilate orifice to remove
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Submandibular Calculi
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Unusual Anatomy
Unusual anatomy in the gland manifested as
strictures in the duct system
• Recurrent obstruction with associated pain and
inflammation of glands
• Pooling of saliva leading to secondary infection
May need surgery to remove affected area of gland
or entire gland
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Inflammation/Infection: Viral
Mumps is the most frequent diagnosis of acute
viral sialadenitis
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Member of the paramyxoviridae
Mostly in parotid
The incubation period is 2-3 weeks
Acute painful swelling and enlargement
Fever, headache, loss of appetite
Most common in children
Very effective vaccine
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Inflammation/Infection:
Bacterial
Types
• Acute suppurative bacterial sialadenitis
Commonly S. aureus, S. viridans, H. influenzae, E. coli
• Chronic recurrent sialadenitis
May be secondary to some type of obstruction or unusual
anatomy
May be due to resistant organism; culture to determine
Treatment
• Antibiotics and analgesics
• Rehydrate and stimulate saliva
• May need open drainage/surgery
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Bacterial Parotiditis
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Systemic Diseases
Sjögren’s Syndrome
Sarcoidosis
Cystic Fibrosis
Diabetes
Alzheimer’s Disease
AIDS
Graft vs Host Disease
Dehydration
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Sjögren’s Syndrome
Autoimmune disorder affecting lacrimal and
salivary glands
• Xerostomia and keratoconjunctivitis sicca
Primary and Secondary disease
• The latter associated with another autoimmune disorder
such as RA, SLE, etc.
Dense inflammatory infiltrate with destruction of
glandular tissue
Treatment is palliative
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Sarcoidosis
Unknown cause; believed to be alteration in
cellular immune function and involvement
of some allergen
Any organ but most often the lungs; can
affect the parotid gland
Granulomatous inflammation
Most often drugs of choice are
corticosteroids
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Cystic Fibrosis
Faulty transport of sodium and chloride from
within cells lining lungs and pancreas to their
outer surface
Causes production of an abnormally thick sticky
mucus
Obstruction of pancreas leads to digestive
problems; inability to digest and absorb nutrients
Gene has been identified and cloned
No known “cure” therefore palliative treatment
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Diabetes
Uncontrolled blood glucose levels may
contribute to xerostomia
Medications may induce xerostomia
May get enlargement and inflammation of
parotid glands (common in endocrine
diseases)
Difficulty to ward off infection: candidiasis,
gingivitis, periodontitis, and caries
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Alzheimer’s Disease
A neurodegenerative disorder leading to a
decrease in cognition and mobility
May affect the neurological component to salivary
production and/or flow
Xerostomic medications
• Complicated by behavior which makes it difficult to
maintain a healthy dentition
Poor oral hygiene
Poor cooperation for dental care and treatment in a
conventional setting
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AIDS
HIV-Associated Salivary Gland Disease
(HIV-SGD)
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Enlargement of the major salivary glands
Xerostomia
Some similarities to autoimmune diseases
HIV itself not consistently found to be in
glandular tissue
Medications
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Graft vs Host Disease (GVHD)
Immune cells of an allogenic transplant attack
recipient
Acute, < 100 days, and chronic > 100 days
Major cause of morbidity and mortality
Initial presentation as a red rash
Salivary gland involvement with swelling and
inflammation
Progresses quickly to life-threatening condition
Treat by increasing immunosuppression
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Dehydration
Defined as the loss of water and essential body
salts (electrolytes) needed for body function
• Sweating, diarrhea, emesis, blood loss, etc.
Symptoms include flushed face, dry, warm skin,
fatigue, cramping, reduced amount of urine
Oral signs/symptoms
• Xerostomia, dry tongue
• Thick, sticky saliva
• Dry, cracked lips (cheilosis)
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Head and Neck Cancer:
Radiation Therapy
Goal is to kill cancer cells
Measured in Gray (Gy) units of absorbed
radiation: 1 Gy = 100 cGy = 100 rads
Can be used alone or combined with surgery
and/or chemotherapy
Three main routes
• External beam (most head and neck)
• Brachytherapy (body cavities)
• Interstitial
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Radiation Dose
Dependent on tumor tissue/type
Average of 200 cGy daily for 5 consecutive
days with two days of rest
Total cummulative dose ranges from 5000
cGy to 8000 cGy for advanced tumors
Threshold of permanent destruction is 21004000 cGy
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Tissue Response
25 Gy: Bone marrow, lymphocytes, GI
epithelium, germinal cells
25-50 Gy: Oral epithelium, endothelium of
blood cells, salivary glands, growing bone
and cartilage, collagen
Doses > 50 Gy: bone and cartilage, skeletal
muscle
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Tissue Changes
Irradiated tissue becomes hypocellular,
hypovascular, and hypoxic resulting in fibrosis
and vascular occlusion
The destruction is mostly permanent
• Irradiated tissue does not re-vascularize with time
As a result, irradiated tissue does not heal well
after injury
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Common Side Effects: Systemic
Nausea
Vomiting
Neutropenia
Alopecia
Fatigue
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Common Side Effects: Oral
Mucositis and Dermatitis
Dysphagia
Dysgeusia
Trismus
Osteo- and soft tissue necrosis
Xerostomia
• Fungal infections
• Radiation Caries
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Radiation: Xerostomia
Parotid gland is more susceptible than the
submandibular or sublingual glands
See a slight improvement after therapy but
will soon plateau at a lower level than pretherapy
Result is thick, ropey saliva, decreased in
amount, with markedly diminished
lubricating and protective qualities
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Radiation: Mucositis
The oral eipthelium will get a “sun burn”
like inflammation
This will be exacerbated by the lack of the
lubricating properties of saliva
The result will be a red, irritated, dry
mucosa
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Saliva Post-Radiation
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Mucositis
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Radiation Caries
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Prosthesis-Induced Stomatitis
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Fungal Infections
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Scrotal Tongue
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Chemotherapy
Is given orally, IV, by injection (SQ, IM, IL), or
topically in cycles depending on the treatment
goals (type of cancer, how your body responds,
how well you body recovers, etc.)
Affects all rapidly dividing cells
• Many side effects in all body systems
Oral complications from direct damage to oral
tissues secondary to chemotherapy and indirect
damage due to regional or systemic toxicity
• Frequency and severity related to systemic immune
compromise, i.e. myelosuppresion
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Chemotherapeutics
Drugs commonly associated with oral
complications
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Methotrexate
Doxorubicin
5-Fluorouracil (5-FU)
Busulfan
Bleomycin
Platinum coordination complexes
Cisplatin
Carboplatin
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Tissue Damage
The propensity of chemotherapy to damage tissue,
specifically oral tissues, is dependent on each
individual drug and its ability to induce
myelosuppresion (neutropenia)
Drugs differ on the timing of myelosuppresion
• Consider this when treating patients undergoing
chemotherapy
Tissues, oral tissues, return to pre-chemotherapy
state when allowed time to heal after therapy
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Common Side Effects: Systemic
Fatigue
Nausea
Constipation
Diarrhea
Hemorrhage
Anemia
Neutropenia
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Pain
Alopecia
Peripheral neuropathy
CNS disturbances
Fluid retention
Bladder and kidney
problems
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Common Side Effects: Oral
Mucositis (ulcerative)
Reactivation of HSV
Dysgeusia
Dysphagia
Infections
Neuropathies
Salivary gland
dysfunction/toxicity
• xerostomia
• Fungal
• Periodontium
• periapices
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Summary
While there appear to be many insults leading to
salivary hypofunction, healthy aging does not
appear to be one of them
The main insults leading to salivary gland damage
and/or hypofunction are
• Disease
Local
Systemic
• Environmental insults/trauma
Radiation
Chemotherapy
• Medications
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