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Journal Article
Review
Oral submucous fibrosis. A review.
Australian Dental Journal 1996 October
Oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) affects an estimated 2.5 million people, mostly in the Indian subcontinent. Limitation of oral opening resulting in difficulty in eating is the main presenting feature. Although nutritional deficiencies and immunological processes may play a part in the pathogenesis, the available epidemiological evidence indicates that chewing betel quid (containing areca nut, tobacco, slaked lime or other species) is an important risk factor for OSF. Genetically determined susceptibility could explain why only a small fraction of those using betel quid develop the disease. In OSF there is an incidence of oral cancer of 7.6 per cent for a median 10-year follow-up period. Risk markers for malignant transformation in OSF include epithelial dysplasia, silver binding nucleolar organizer region counts, and sister-chromatid exchange frequencies; p53 tumour suppressor gene mutations may be involved in these potentially malignant changes.
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