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Burning mouth syndrome: Analysis of diagnostic delay in 500 patients

Oral Dis. 2023 Feb 24. doi: 10.1111/odi.14553. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To assess the diagnostic delay, the number and type of referrals and the clinical and psychological profile in a wide sample of patients with Burning Mouth Syndrome (BMS).

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data on the disease onset, oral symptoms, type and number of practitioners consulted, misdiagnoses, and the presence of medically unexplained extraoral physical symptoms were recorded in 500 BMS patients. Potential predictors of diagnostic delay were also evaluated.

RESULTS: The mean diagnostic delay was 29.71±47.19 months. An average of 2.61±1.65 practitioners were consulted by each patient, the most frequent being the general physicians (287; 57.4%), maxillofacial surgeons (111; 22.2%) and otolaryngologists (104; 20.8%). The mean number of misdiagnoses was 3.54±1.85. Nonspecific stomatitis, candidiasis and gastroesophageal reflux were the most common misdiagnoses. Higher age, low education, the presence of dysgeusia and a previous history of psychiatric illness were predictors of a longer diagnostic delay (p-value: 0.028, 0.050, 0.007, 0.034 respectively).

CONCLUSIONS: The lack of knowledge among specialists, the high rate of misdiagnosis and the diagnostic delay of BMS highlight the need to introduce educational interventions in all medical specialties in order to promote an early and appropriate diagnosis, thereby improving the prognosis and quality of life of the patients.

PMID:36825392 | DOI:10.1111/odi.14553

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