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Fig. 39.3 Oral changes. A, Oral hairy leukoplakia. Vertically oriented white plaques with a corrugated appearance are seen on the lateral edge of the tongue. B, Hyperplastic candidiasis. A white coating that does not scrape off is present on the dorsal surface of the tongue in this HIV-positive patient. |
Pseudomembranous candidiasis appears as whitish, cottage-cheese–like or creamy plaques at any site in the oropharynx. These are removable when scraped and may leave a reddish surface.
Erythematous candidiasis appears as well-demarcated patches of erythema on the palate or dorsal tongue. Lesions of
erythematous candidiasis on the tongue can look smooth and depapillated.
Hyperplastic candidiasis appears as a white coating on the dorsum of the tongue that persists with scraping (Fig. 39-3B).
Angular cheilitis consists of erythema, cracking, and fissuring of the mouth corners. More than one type of oropharyngeal candidiasis can coexist.