Palifermin in Preventing Oral Mucositis Caused by Chemotherapy and/or Radiation Therapy in Young...
Gastrointestinal MucositisMalignant NeoplasmThis randomized phase II trial is studying palifermin to see how well it works compared with a placebo in preventing oral mucositis caused by chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy in young patients undergoing stem cell transplant. Palifermin may help relieve or prevent oral mucositis caused by chemotherapy and radiation therapy in young patients undergoing stem cell transplant.
Novel Coating to Minimize Bacterial Adhesions and Tooth Wear in Denture Acrylic
Denture StomatitisWear of Denture TeethThis study evaluates the effect of coatings on bacterial adhesion on denture acrylic and the wear of denture teeth.
Evaluate the Efficacy of Selenium for the Prevention of Chemotherapy-induced Mucositis During Autologous...
Mucositis OralStem Cell Transplant ComplicationsChemotherapy-induced mucositis is an important complication after autologous stem cell transplantation. It is mainly responsible for pain and dysphagia requiring opioids and artificial nutrition. It can also induce infectious complications. A few medication has demonstrated efficacy in this setting. It has been suggested that selenium can reduce the intensity of mucositis due to its antioxydant activity. The investigators therefore perform a randomized study to confirm this preliminary data.
Thalidomide With or Without Probiotics in Radioactive Oral Mucositis
Oral MucositisQuality of LifeStudy on the application of thalidomide with or without probiotics in radioactive oral mucositis
A Comparative Investigation of Standard Of Care (SOC) and Episil® in Combination Versus SOC Alone...
Oral MucositisTo compare the performance of standard of care (SOC) + episil® versus SOC alone on oral mucositis in patients receiving conditioning treatment for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). The primary variable will be the area under the curve (AUC) of oral mucositis scores defined by the World Health Organisation (WHO) oral toxicity scale assessed daily by the investigator over the 28-day study period.
Oral Mucositis in Patients Undergoing Antineoplastic Chemotherapy
Oral MucositisThe purpose of this study was to: To investigate the feasibility of using infrared (IR) thermometer to grade the severity of oral mucositis in patients with multiple myeloma undergoing chemotherapy. To obtain preliminary data on the most optimal method of scoring the severity of oral mucositis by comparing the results obtained using the IR thermometer to the World Health Organization (WHO) mucositis grading system and the patient self-assessment questionnaire. To Investigate the correlation between the quantitative readings obtained from oral mucosa with the IR thermometer.
Hyaluronic Acid in Counteracting Aphthous Stomatitis
Aphthous StomatitisOral mucosal ulcers can determine a real worsening of the quality of life. Conventional therapy usually lasts not less than 2-3 weeks, and carries a high risk of serious side effects; furthermore, ulcers often recur. The use of hyaluronic acid applied as an adhesive gel over the lesions seems to have potential in terms of efficacy and the avoidance of side effects. Of course, hyaluronic acid-based formulations show different effects and tolerability. In this retrospective observational study, the results obtained using a hyaluronic-acid based medical device applied for 14 days to counteract ulcers in adults will be reported.
The Effect of Alpha Lipoic Acid on the Incidence and Severity of Radiotherapy-Induced Oral Mucositis...
Radiation-Induced MucositisA prospective, randomized, controlled, single-blinded study will be conducted at Clinical Oncology department, Ain Shams University Hospitals, assessing the effect of Alpha Lipoic Acid on the incidence and severity of radiotherapy induced oral mucositis in Head and Neck cancer patients.
Prevention of Oral Mucositis After Using Chamomile Oral Cryotherapy Versus Oral Cryotherapy in Pediatric...
Oral Mucositis (Ulcerative) Due to Antineoplastic Therapyoral mucositis is a painful situation that significantly affects patients' quality of life with the severe cases being associated with ulcerated mucosa and secondary infection which may lead to life-threatening sepsis.Chamomile infusion in cryotherapy was used to aid in reduction of chemotherapy induced mucositis and to enhance the effect of standard cryotherapy alone by its anti-inflammatory, antifungal and antibacterial effect. The occurrence of oral mucositis is a significant complication of chemotherapy with prevalence of up to 80% in pediatric patients.The study is to be conducted at the in and outpatient clinics at the Department of Pediatric Oncology, National Cancer Institute,Egypt. A Structured interview questionnaire sheet will be filled with personal, medical and dental history. Intraoral examination will be carried out using sterile latex gloves, masks, plain mouth mirrors, sterile gauze and wooden tongue depressor. Patients who will agree to participate in the study will watch a video explaining how to perform oral hygiene.Preparation of the interventions is done in the clinic with 400 ml of distilled water with or without the infusion of 10 g of chamomile flowers."Chamomile classic infusion, Royal Herbs" .Ice cubes will be prepared in special ice trays placed in the chemotherapy center for this purpose.Patients will be instructed to swish the ice cubes around their oral cavities starting 5 minutes before chemotherapy infusion, continuing 30 minutes throughout the session and for additional 35 minutes after completion of intravenous chemotherapy session. Follow ups are done at the 8th,15th and the 21st day of interventions application.
Prevention of Oral Mucositis After Using Oral Topical Vitamin E Versus Voriconazole and Levofloxacin...
Oral Mucositis (Ulcerative) Due to Antineoplastic TherapyStatement of problem Oral mucositis is an inflammatory condition that affects mucosa of the oral cavity. The etiology of this kind of aggravation is related to the introduction of radiotherapy or chemotherapeutic medications. (Alvarino et al., 2014, Rohani et al., 2015) With the prevalence of mucositis up to 80% in pediatric patient (Cheng et al., 2004). Clinically, oral mucositis is a painful situation that significantly affects patients' quality of life. The severe cases are associated with ulcerated mucosa and secondary infection which may led to life-threatening sepsis. (Kolokythas , et al., 2010) Oral mucositis is one of the most debilitating complications following chemotherapy, its remains an unresolved clinical problem, and it has physical and psychosocial implications for patients. The ulcerative lesions are often very painful, requiring treatment with analgesics and supportive nutrition, and the cancer treatment may need to be interrupted or modified. All these conditions may increase treatment costs, preclude further treatment and alter the quality of life of the patient. (Sonis et al., 2001) There are many oral care regimens including prophylactic antibacterial and antifungal drugs, Levofloxacin is antibacterial drug causing inhibition of cell wall synthesis agent, Levofloxacin failed to show any significant difference in mucositis or oral ulceration (Bucaneve et al., 2005). While voriconazole is antifungal that has been noted to cause transient visual disturbances and A major drawback is potential interactions with certain chemotherapy agents (Marks et al., 2011). Vitamin E is an antioxidant agent which may limit tissue damage from free oxygen radicals and, thus, may reduce the severity of mucositis during cancer treatments and protect cell membranes from radiation damage (Alterio et al., 2007). It has a very low toxicity and is generally well-tolerated (Geeraert et al., 2015). Rationale There is no enough studies about vitamin E effect in reduction of oral mucositis. El -Housseiny et al., (2007), recommend that oral mucositis is successfully treated by the topical application of vitamin "E", compared to its systemic administration. Vitamin "E" alone is not enough for the treatment of infected lesions; further studies using vitamin "E" to treat the infected lesions are needed. Also based on the recommendation of Wadleigh et al., (1992) who was the first one to study the topical effect of vitamin "E" on oral mucositis; however, they did not know whether the effect was due to the topical application or the systemic absorption of the vitamin when applied topically. Benefit to patient and population: The vitamin E is nontoxic, odorless, tasteless, and well tolerated by the patients, reduce nutritional compromise, maintain impact on quality of life, and reasonable economic costs. Benefits of practitioners and clinicians: The use of vitamin E is easy to apply, not technique sensitive and it is cheap and readily available reducing clinical time.