[Drug-induced xerostomia].

Ann Med Interne (Paris)

Laboratoire de Pathobiologie Orale, Faculté de Chirurgie-Dentaire, Université de Nice-Sophia Antipolis, Nice.

Published: April 1998

Hyposalivation is related to decreased salivary flow, with xerostomia as an ultimate degree. Prolonged severe hyposalivation or xerostomia may induce oral pain, poor tolerance to dentures, loss in taste acuity and increased incidence of oral infections: gingivitis, periodontitis, oral candidosis, infectious sialadenitis and multiple dental caries. Most of the time hyposalivation is a reversible drug-induced side-effect. Hyposalivation is frequent, particularly in elderly people with numerous drugs prescribed on a long-term continuous basis, and in psychiatric patients. It remains a neglected clinical problem. Besides the well-known antimuscarinics, antihistaminics, imipraminic antidepressants and phenothiazic neuroleptics, many drugs may induce hyposalivation. This work aims to review drug-induced xerostomia in 1997 (French pharmacopeae), and high-risk associations.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hyposalivation
5
[drug-induced xerostomia]
4
xerostomia] hyposalivation
4
hyposalivation decreased
4
decreased salivary
4
salivary flow
4
flow xerostomia
4
xerostomia ultimate
4
ultimate degree
4
degree prolonged
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!