Author:
Owotade Foluso J.,Fatusi Olawunmi A.,Adebiyi Kehinde E.,Ajike Sunday O.,Folayan Morenike O.
Abstract
Abstract
A changing picture of oral lesions associated with HIV/AIDS has been documented. With the use of antiretroviral therapy, salivary gland swellings and other less common conditions associated with HIV/AIDS are now becoming more common. Our review of the literature showed the presence of parotid swelling in HIV-1 infection has increased from a range of 5-10% to 20% in AIDS. However, to the best of our knowledge, none from sub-Saharan Africa, which is the epicenter of the HIV infection and where access to antiretroviral therapy is poorest, has been primarily reported in literature.
This report documents five cases of bilateral parotid gland enlargement as the presenting clinical manifestation of HIV/AIDS. The combination of a fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy, ultrasound imaging, and histological diagnosis increased the accuracy of diagnosis. While two patients had access to antiretroviral therapy, other modes of management were cystic aspiration and parotidectomy. One of the patients treated with parotidectomy had facial nerve injury, and the short-term aesthetic outcome between surgical treatment and antiretroviral therapy did not appear different. However, all our patients were lost to follow-up within a 2-year period.
For a resource-constrained environment like Nigeria where stigma and discrimination is high and access to antiretroviral therapy is limited, there is a need to understand how best to manage a lymphoepithelial lesion in HIV/AIDS patients.
Citation
Owotade FJ, Fatusi OA, Adebiyi KE, Ajike SO, Folayan MO. Clinical Experience with Parotid Gland Enlargement in HIV Infection: A Report of Five Cases in Nigeria. J Contemp Dent Pract 2005 February;(6)1:136-145.
Publisher
Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishing
Cited by
9 articles.
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