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There are several
factors, which have strong links with the production of oral cancers.
The first and most important factor is tobacco abuse.
Cigars, pipes, cigarettes, or chewing tobacco, dipping snuff, or using
betel leaf with betel nut account for 80% to 90% of oral cancers.
Because these habits are extremely prevalent in our country, nearly
33% of cancers in the Indian subcontinent are head and neck cancers,
especially, oral cancers.
Studies have shown that smokeless tobacco users such as gutkha users,
betel nut and betel leaf users, and tobacco chewers are at particular
risk of developing oral cancer. For long-time users, the risk is extremely
great, making the use of snuff or chewing tobacco amongst young people
a very special concern.
People who stop using tobacco, even after many years of abuse, definitely
benefit and greatly reduce the risk of developing oral cancers.
Chronic and a heavy use of alcohol also increases
the risk of oral cancer, which is extremely potentiated if the person
also happens to be a smoker.
Those patients who have a history of leukoplakia,
which is a whitish patch inside the mouth, have an extreme predilection
for developing oral cancers. The causes of leukoplakia are not well
understood, but it is commonly associated with the heavy use of tobacco
and alcohol. The condition usually arises in the maximally irritated
areas of the oral cavity, including the gums and the mouth lining
of smokeless tobacco users, and the lower lip of cigarette and pipe
smokers.
Another precancerous condition is called erythroplakia,
which appears as a red patch in the mouth. Erythroplakia occurs most
often in elderly people after 60 to 70 years of age.
Melanoplakia and leukoedema
are two other conditions, which are precancerously found in the oral
cavity.
Early diagnosis and treatment of leukoplakia and erythroplakia are
important because cancer may develop in these patches.
Other chronic irritant factors like sharp teeth
can also cause an infection and inflammation in certain areas of the
tongue, which, if longstanding, can become cancerous.
It is mandatory that one stops smoking, using alcohol and smokeless
tobacco, and visits the dentist regularly to have dental hygiene checked,
and also to look for precancerous lesions while they are still very
early.
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| Cancers of the Oropharynx |
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