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40 M presents with a complaint of mouth and throat pain getting worse for 4 weeks.
Pt is a homosexual with a long history of dental problems. 6 weeks ago he had extractions of his remaining teeth so he could be fitted with dentures. He began wearing his new dentures about a week after the extraction. About a week after that his mouth and throat began to hurt and he has been unable to eat. He has lost 40 pounds in the ensuing 4 weeks.
I was expecting to see some sequelae of the dental procedure such as abscess, dry socket, etc. On exam patient has obvious florid thrush of the oral cavity and pharynx.
Oops. Full mental reset. The dental procedure is a red herring. I now have a homosexual male with 40 pounds of weight loss and thrush. So for the students, what is this?
That is a very typical presentation for HIV. Actually it would be AIDS as the thrush (when it is esophageal as it was in this patient) is an AIDS defining illness.
CDC Paper on AIDS Defining Illnesses
Wikipedia article on AIDS Defining Illnesses which is a pretty good summary.
So I admitted the patient to the resident medicine service for work up and treatment. He couldn't tolerate PO so admission was indicated.
Now since this is a wacky case you know it can't be that simple 😀. It was not HIV. What could it be?
I followed the patient to see if I was right about my presumed diagnosis of HIV. HIV tests were all negative. T Cell counts were normal. ID confirmed oral, pharyngeal and esophageal thrush. What was this?
The medicine intern, taking a history like only an intern can, discovered the truth. The patient began wearing his dentures and using denture adhesive about a week before the onset of symptoms. He was just finishing the course of antibiotics he was given for the dental extractions. When he would take out his dentures at night he didn't like the feeling of the left over adhesive on his gums. So of course he began using a nail file to abrade away the left over adhesive on his gums every night. This would, of course, be the same nail file he uses to file his thickened, discolored, onchomycotic toenails.😱
None of us, including ID, really knew if you could directly seed your mouth with the fungus from your toenails. Is it the same species of fungus? Regardless, we were pretty sure that antibiotics to kill off normal flora + repetitive abrasion with a dirty nail file was not the way to go for good oral hygiene.
This was definitely a new one on me.
Pt is a homosexual with a long history of dental problems. 6 weeks ago he had extractions of his remaining teeth so he could be fitted with dentures. He began wearing his new dentures about a week after the extraction. About a week after that his mouth and throat began to hurt and he has been unable to eat. He has lost 40 pounds in the ensuing 4 weeks.
I was expecting to see some sequelae of the dental procedure such as abscess, dry socket, etc. On exam patient has obvious florid thrush of the oral cavity and pharynx.
Oops. Full mental reset. The dental procedure is a red herring. I now have a homosexual male with 40 pounds of weight loss and thrush. So for the students, what is this?
That is a very typical presentation for HIV. Actually it would be AIDS as the thrush (when it is esophageal as it was in this patient) is an AIDS defining illness.
CDC Paper on AIDS Defining Illnesses
Wikipedia article on AIDS Defining Illnesses which is a pretty good summary.
So I admitted the patient to the resident medicine service for work up and treatment. He couldn't tolerate PO so admission was indicated.
Now since this is a wacky case you know it can't be that simple 😀. It was not HIV. What could it be?
I followed the patient to see if I was right about my presumed diagnosis of HIV. HIV tests were all negative. T Cell counts were normal. ID confirmed oral, pharyngeal and esophageal thrush. What was this?
The medicine intern, taking a history like only an intern can, discovered the truth. The patient began wearing his dentures and using denture adhesive about a week before the onset of symptoms. He was just finishing the course of antibiotics he was given for the dental extractions. When he would take out his dentures at night he didn't like the feeling of the left over adhesive on his gums. So of course he began using a nail file to abrade away the left over adhesive on his gums every night. This would, of course, be the same nail file he uses to file his thickened, discolored, onchomycotic toenails.😱
None of us, including ID, really knew if you could directly seed your mouth with the fungus from your toenails. Is it the same species of fungus? Regardless, we were pretty sure that antibiotics to kill off normal flora + repetitive abrasion with a dirty nail file was not the way to go for good oral hygiene.
This was definitely a new one on me.

good story