Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit.

The aim of this study was to determine the profile of patients referred to a specialist oral medicine and oral pathology unit in Kuala Lumpur by reviewing clinical dental records received in Oral Pathology Diagnostic Service (OPDS) in Faculty of Dentistry, UKM from 2001 until 2010. A total of 547...

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Main Authors: Suraya Hani Mohd Sinon, Nur Syazwani Che Husin, NurulJannah Yusof
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2013
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/7102/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/7102/1/vol_3_no_2_2013_43.pdf
id ukm-7102
recordtype eprints
spelling ukm-71022016-12-14T06:43:06Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/7102/ Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit. Suraya Hani Mohd Sinon, Nur Syazwani Che Husin, NurulJannah Yusof, The aim of this study was to determine the profile of patients referred to a specialist oral medicine and oral pathology unit in Kuala Lumpur by reviewing clinical dental records received in Oral Pathology Diagnostic Service (OPDS) in Faculty of Dentistry, UKM from 2001 until 2010. A total of 547 archival biopsy clinical dental records were reviewed and analysed using SPSS version 17.0. Oral and maxillofacial diseases were frequently seen in female (1.3:1), young adults (30.0%) of Malay ethnicity (64.6%). Most of the acquired specimens were from dental specialists (n=451, 84.8%), particularly from oral and maxillofacial surgeons (OMFS) (n=349, 63.8%) compared to general dental practitioners (GDPs) (n=81, 14.8%). Almost all of the biopsy specimens were of soft tissue origin (n=462, 84.4%), derived from lining mucosa (n=197, 36.0%) and were biopsied excisionally (n=325, 59.4%) more often than by incisional biopsy (n=207, 37.8%). A large proportion of the oral and maxillofacial diseases were of reactive (n=188, 34.4%) and inflammatory(n=121, 22.1%) cause. Tumours are mainly benign (n=69, 12.6%) with only small cases are malignant (n=34, 6.2%). The most common histological diagnoses were accounted by mucocele (n=56, 10.2%), pyogenic granuloma(n=47, 8.6%), fibroepithelial polyp (n=38, 6.9%), radicular cyst (n=33, 6.0%) and periapical granuloma (n=29, 5.3%). This study characterizes the clinical profile of patients seen in our oral medicine and oral pathology unit. Present findings can be used as a reference to the clinicians and pathologists in effective patient management and organization in the future. Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2013-08-15 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/7102/1/vol_3_no_2_2013_43.pdf Suraya Hani Mohd Sinon, and Nur Syazwani Che Husin, and NurulJannah Yusof, (2013) Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit. International Journal of Public Health Research, 3 (2). pp. 325-333. ISSN 2232-0245
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institution Universiti Kebangasaan Malaysia
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language English
description The aim of this study was to determine the profile of patients referred to a specialist oral medicine and oral pathology unit in Kuala Lumpur by reviewing clinical dental records received in Oral Pathology Diagnostic Service (OPDS) in Faculty of Dentistry, UKM from 2001 until 2010. A total of 547 archival biopsy clinical dental records were reviewed and analysed using SPSS version 17.0. Oral and maxillofacial diseases were frequently seen in female (1.3:1), young adults (30.0%) of Malay ethnicity (64.6%). Most of the acquired specimens were from dental specialists (n=451, 84.8%), particularly from oral and maxillofacial surgeons (OMFS) (n=349, 63.8%) compared to general dental practitioners (GDPs) (n=81, 14.8%). Almost all of the biopsy specimens were of soft tissue origin (n=462, 84.4%), derived from lining mucosa (n=197, 36.0%) and were biopsied excisionally (n=325, 59.4%) more often than by incisional biopsy (n=207, 37.8%). A large proportion of the oral and maxillofacial diseases were of reactive (n=188, 34.4%) and inflammatory(n=121, 22.1%) cause. Tumours are mainly benign (n=69, 12.6%) with only small cases are malignant (n=34, 6.2%). The most common histological diagnoses were accounted by mucocele (n=56, 10.2%), pyogenic granuloma(n=47, 8.6%), fibroepithelial polyp (n=38, 6.9%), radicular cyst (n=33, 6.0%) and periapical granuloma (n=29, 5.3%). This study characterizes the clinical profile of patients seen in our oral medicine and oral pathology unit. Present findings can be used as a reference to the clinicians and pathologists in effective patient management and organization in the future.
format Article
author Suraya Hani Mohd Sinon,
Nur Syazwani Che Husin,
NurulJannah Yusof,
spellingShingle Suraya Hani Mohd Sinon,
Nur Syazwani Che Husin,
NurulJannah Yusof,
Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit.
author_facet Suraya Hani Mohd Sinon,
Nur Syazwani Che Husin,
NurulJannah Yusof,
author_sort Suraya Hani Mohd Sinon,
title Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit.
title_short Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit.
title_full Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit.
title_fullStr Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit.
title_full_unstemmed Profile of Patients Referred to a Specialist Oral Medicine and Oral Pathology Unit.
title_sort profile of patients referred to a specialist oral medicine and oral pathology unit.
publisher Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
publishDate 2013
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/7102/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/7102/1/vol_3_no_2_2013_43.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T19:48:44Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T19:48:44Z
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