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1 area of gingival recession resulting from an oral lesion.
2 served in necrotized regions of samples from oral lesions.
3 sis (PDD) of the malignant transformation of oral lesions.
4 HHV loads were detected for those (n=7) with oral lesions.
5  on reducing the incidence and recurrence of oral lesions.
6 oid gel, which led to the improvement of the oral lesions.
7 entiate this condition from other ulcerative oral lesions.
8 > or = 50 cutaneous lesions and 19 (49%) had oral lesions.
9 ; IBD patients were additionally surveyed on oral lesions.
10 ere collected in the presence and absence of oral lesions.
11 sone and other drugs completely resolved the oral lesions after 14 months of therapy.
12  tacrolimus ointment completely resolved the oral lesions after 2 months of therapy.
13 ly associated with incidence of precancerous oral lesions (AHR, 2.18; 95% CI, 1.38-3.43).
14 parameters and the presence of opportunistic oral lesions along with records of CD4+ counts and viral
15 erative colitis increases, the occurrence of oral lesions also rises, particularly during severe dise
16 oncurrent detection of potentially cancerous oral lesions among HIV-negative patients but not among H
17  direct sequencing, we examined premalignant oral lesion and oral cancer cell lines and found no intr
18                               27 (13.7%) had oral lesions and 9 (4.6%) had tonsillar signs.
19 ients were informed by their physician about oral lesions and about 10% indicated receiving treatment
20 ort, monkeypox caused genital, perianal, and oral lesions and complications including proctitis and t
21 ious neurotropic herpesvirus responsible for oral lesions and herpesviral encephalitis.
22 e benefits of tobacco cessation in resolving oral lesions and improving overall periodontal and oral
23 odeficiency subsequent to the development of oral lesions and malnutrition.
24 man herpesvirus 8 [HHV-8]) was determined in oral lesions and oral neoplasms common to persons with h
25 essation revealed complete resolution of the oral lesions and overall improvement of periodontal and
26      To describe the frequency and impact of oral lesions and professional dental care costs in patie
27                          Problems related to oral lesions and the amount of money spent for professio
28 s, the PBM did not modify the development of oral lesions and the expression of proliferative and apo
29 orough clinical examination, a biopsy of the oral lesions, and a history of cutaneous psoriasis.
30 at bal mice lack Dsg3 by IF, have typical PV oral lesions, and have a DSG3 gene mutation.
31 tory bowel disease and the importance of the oral lesions as initial presenting signs of systemic dis
32  was consistent in the potentially malignant oral lesions as well as in the primary tumor.
33 ivation of Krt16 in mice consistently causes oral lesions as well as PPK-like hyperkeratotic calluses
34 rugs applicable to the management of painful oral lesions associated with chronic inflammatory condit
35  HSV-2 shedding was never associated with an oral lesion, but it was often concurrent with genital HS
36      This included problems with IBD-related oral lesions, but these are rarely addressed by the medi
37 e periodontitis increased the odds of having oral lesions by almost 2.3-times.
38  assess the feasibility of identification of oral lesions by community health workers using a mobile
39 reening precancerous and cancerous traits in oral lesions, by probing the localized alterations in mi
40                                 However, the oral lesions continued to recur over a period of several
41 people with HIV infection fall to experience oral lesions during the course of their disease.
42 Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) produces oral lesions, encephalitis, keratitis, and severe infect
43 d 1% pimecrolimus cream twice daily to their oral lesions for 4 weeks, whereas group 2 applied a plac
44 ased probes to algorithm-guided detection of oral lesion heterogeneity and margins using optical cohe
45 to oral candidiasis (OC), the most prevalent oral lesion in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
46 ral human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and oral lesions in 161 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-p
47                                          The oral lesions in DSG3-/- mice reduce their food intake, r
48 tal status and the presence of opportunistic oral lesions in human immunodeficiency virus-positive (H
49  crocodile, two Corynebacterium spp. causing oral lesions in penguins and a lesser-known genus, Mergi
50 in populations worldwide and cause recurrent oral lesions in up to 40% of infected subjects.
51                                   Persistent oral lesions, lack of effective oral hygiene, and plaque
52 oyed with FHWs for delineation of suspicious oral lesions (malignant/potentially-malignant disorders)
53          The presence of these often painful oral lesions may hinder oral hygiene efforts resulting i
54 olvement, the clinician should be aware that oral lesions may occur.
55                              The most common oral lesions observed were a coated tongue, grooved tong
56  of virus within salivary glands adjacent to oral lesions of affected animals.
57 the presence of macrophage subpopulations in oral lesions of VX.
58  with cutaneous psoriasis, that present with oral lesions on the attached gingiva.
59                                              Oral lesions reflect HIV status and the stage of immunos
60 tion models to identify risk factors for two oral lesions related to human immunodeficiency virus (HI
61          Immunohistochemical analyses of the oral lesions revealed a subepithelial infiltrate that wa
62 ple, 14 993 respondents for the precancerous oral lesions sample, 16 312 respondents for the bone los
63  a viable therapeutic option for early stage oral lesions that can be delivered in low resource setti
64     HIV-infected individuals frequently have oral lesions that can cause bleeding and release of the
65 ral lichen planus, and all five patients had oral lesions that clinically resembled lichen planus.
66 lammatory conditions, manifesting as painful oral lesions that negatively affect patients' quality of
67 lso demonstrate in five subjects with T1N0M0 oral lesions that our applicators coupled with a low-cos
68                           We speculated that oral lesions (typical in PV patients) might be inhibitin
69 ed diagnosis of gum disease and precancerous oral lesions (W2-W5) and bone loss around teeth, bleedin
70                                  In 27%, the oral lesion was the first sign of a malignant disease.
71                                              Oral lesions were examined by polymerase chain reaction
72    Oral leukoplakia (OPL) is a heterogeneous oral lesion with an increased oral cancer risk.
73  patients indicated having had problems with oral lesions, with CD patients having 46% higher odds an