Pain complaint as the first symptom of oral cancer: a descriptive study
- PMID: 16831673
- DOI: 10.1016/j.tripleo.2005.10.041
Pain complaint as the first symptom of oral cancer: a descriptive study
Abstract
Objective: To identify pain as the initial symptom of oral cancer patients.
Study design: Hospital charts of 1412 patients (1977 to 1998) with oral cancer were reviewed (238 female and 1174 male).
Results: Pain was the initial complaint in 19.2% of the sample. Oral cancer (ratio 4:1) and initial pain (ratio 9:1; P= .001) was prevalent in men. There were 12 different complaints of pain: sore throat (37.6%), tongue pain (14.0%), mouth pain (12.9%); pain when swallowing (11.1%), dental pain (5.9%); earache (5.9%); pain in the palate (4.1%); burning mouth (3.3%); gingival pain (2.2%); pain when chewing (1.1%); neck pain (1.1%), and facial pain (0.7%). Pain was associated with advanced TNM staging and location of tumor in the tongue (P= .004) and the tongue/mouth floor (P< .006).
Conclusion: There were 12 different descriptions of pain; pain was related to TNM staging in the tongue and the tongue/mouth floor. The data presented reinforce the suggestion that patients with orofacial pain need systematized evaluation and sometimes require an interdisciplinary approach.
Comment in
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Pain and its implication as a presenting symptom in oral cavity cancer.J Evid Based Dent Pract. 2007 Sep;7(3):127-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jebdp.2007.05.003. J Evid Based Dent Pract. 2007. PMID: 17967398 No abstract available.
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