Dental Checkups Are Not Just About Cavities
At the Center for Dental Anesthesia, we encourage people to come in twice a year for a dental examination and cleaning. If you forego semiannual dental checkups because you don’t believe you have any cavities, perhaps getting an oral cancer screening is a more persuasive reason to see your dentist regularly. (While your dentist is checking for oral cancer, we encourage you to have a thorough dental examination as well!)
Oral Cancers Don’t Get as Much Attention
In the last few decades, lung and breast cancer have drawn a lot of public attention. There is relatively less awareness of oral cancer even though it claims almost 10,000 lives every year in the United States. If you smoke or have contracted HPV, you have an increased risk of developing oral cancer.
Early Diagnosis is Critical
At the Center for Dental Anesthesia, we work to broaden awareness of oral cancer and the significance of early diagnosis. Courtesy of the CDC, Oral Cancer Foundation, and Johns Hopkins Medicine, here are 5 critical things to know about oral (mouth) and oropharyngeal (back of mouth and throat) cancers.
1. About 80% of individuals with oral cancer use some type of tobacco (cigarettes, chewing tobacco, pipes).
2. 40% of men and women who receive late-stage diagnosis of oral cancer pass away within five years. The survival rate for early-stage diagnosis is 90%.
3. In many cases, it is extremely challenging for the individual to detect oral and oropharyngeal cancers because they can produce indistinct symptoms or no symptoms at all. Any abnormality in the mouth or throat, even if small and painless, should be examined by a dentist or doctor.
4. HPV (the most frequent sexually transmitted disease in the U.S.) is the most common cause of oropharyngeal cancer. Of the numerous strains of HPV, HPV16 is the one most regularly linked to oropharyngeal cancer.
5. Black males have a substantially higher risk of dying from oral cancer than whites.
An oral cancer check is easy!
A visual oral cancer exam is relatively quick and convenient, especially as compared to other cancer screening tests such as colonoscopies and mammograms. If an abnormality is discovered during an exam, the patient is referred to an appropriate specialist for further testing and diagnosis.
Sources:
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/healthlibrary/conditions/oral_health/oral_cancer_and_tobacco_85,P00900/
https://www.cdc.gov/oralhealth/conditions/index.html
CONTACT CENTER FOR DENTAL ANESTHESIA:
703-429-0802
LOCATION (TAP TO OPEN IN GOOGLE MAPS):
5284 Dawes Ave
Alexandria, Virginia
22311