Oral sequelae of head and neck radiotherapy

A Vissink*, J Jansma, FKL Spijkervet, FR Burlage, RP Coppes

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

    692 Citations (Scopus)
    119 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    In addition to anti-tumor effects, ionizing radiation causes damage in normal tissues located in the radiation portals. Oral complications of radiotherapy in the head and neck region are the result of the deleterious effects of radiation on, e. g., salivary glands, oral mucosa, bone, dentition, masticatory musculature, and temporomandibular joints. The clinical consequences of radiotherapy include mucositis, hyposalivation, taste loss, osteoradionecrosis, radiation caries, and trismus. Mucositis and taste loss are reversible consequences that usually subside early post-irradiation, while hyposalivation is normally irreversible. Furthermore, the risk of developing radiation caries and osteoradionecrosis is a life-long threat. All these consequences form a heavy burden for the patients and have a tremendous impact on their quality of life during and after radiotherapy. In this review, the radiation-induced changes in healthy oral tissues and the resulting clinical consequences are discussed.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)199-212
    Number of pages14
    JournalCritical reviews in oral biology & medicine
    Volume14
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May-2003

    Keywords

    • radiotherapy
    • mucositis
    • xerostomia
    • caries
    • osteoradionecrosis
    • SALIVARY-GLAND FUNCTION
    • RADIATION-INDUCED XEROSTOMIA
    • CONVENTIONALLY FRACTIONATED RADIOTHERAPY
    • PATIENTS RECEIVING RADIOTHERAPY
    • RAT SUBMANDIBULAR-GLANDS
    • TOTAL-BODY IRRADIATION
    • BOVINE DENTAL ENAMEL
    • CANCER-PATIENTS
    • PAROTID-GLAND
    • DOSE-RESPONSE

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