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Oral Complications of Chemotherapy and Head/Neck Radiation (PDQ®)
Patient Version   Health Professional Version   En español   Last Modified: 03/13/2008



Introduction






Overview






Description and Causes






Prevention and Treatment of Oral Complications Before Chemotherapy and/or Radiation Therapy Begins






Management of Oral Complications During and After Chemotherapy and/or Radiation Therapy






Management of Oral Complications of High-Dose Chemotherapy and/or Stem Cell Transplant






Relapse and Second Cancers






Oral Complications Not Related to Chemotherapy or Radiation Therapy






Mental and Social Considerations






Special Considerations for Children






Get More Information From NCI






Changes to This Summary (03/13/2008)






Questions or Comments About This Summary






About PDQ



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Description and Causes

Radiation therapy and chemotherapy may cause some of the same oral side effects, including the following:

  • Mucositis (an inflammation of the mucous membranes in the mouth).
  • Infections in the mouth or that travel through the bloodstream, reaching and affecting cells all over the body.
  • Taste changes.
  • Dry mouth.
  • Pain.
  • Changes in dental growth and development in children.
  • Malnutrition (lack of nutrients needed by the body for health, often caused by the inability to eat).
  • Dehydration (lack of water needed by the body for health, often caused by the inability to drink).
  • Tooth decay and gum disease.

Complications may be caused directly or indirectly by anticancer therapy.

Oral complications associated with chemotherapy and radiation therapy may be caused directly by the treatment or may result indirectly from side effects of the treatment. Radiation therapy may directly damage oral tissue, salivary glands, and bone. Areas treated may scar or waste away.

Slow healing and infection are indirect complications of cancer treatment. Both chemotherapy and radiation therapy can affect the ability of cells to reproduce, which slows the healing process in the mouth. Chemotherapy may reduce the number of white blood cells and weaken the immune system (the organs and cells that defend the body against infection and disease), making it easier for the patient to develop an infection.

Complications can be acute or chronic.

Acute complications are those that occur during therapy. Chemotherapy usually causes acute complications that heal after treatment ends.

Chronic complications are those that continue or develop months to years after therapy ends. Radiation can cause acute complications but may also cause permanent tissue damage that puts the patient at a lifelong risk of oral complications. The following chronic complications commonly continue after radiation therapy to the head and/or neck has ended:

  • Dry mouth.
  • Tooth decay.
  • Infections.
  • Taste changes.
  • Problems using the mouth and jaw due to tissue and bone loss and/or the growth of benign tumors in the skin and muscle.

Invasive dental procedures can cause additional problems. The dental care of patients who have undergone radiation therapy will therefore need to be adapted to the patient's ongoing complications.

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