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Home » Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma: Symptoms, Causes

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma: Symptoms, Causes

March 22, 2025 by Kristensmith Taylor Leave a Comment

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma: Symptoms, Causes

Discuss briefly squamous cell carcinoma.

Answer. Squamous cell carcinoma is histological terminology for cancer arising from stratified squamous epithelium.

Squamous cell carcinoma of oral cavity i.e. oral squamous cell carcinoma is the most common malignant tumor of oral cavity.

“Understanding The Causes Of Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma”

Squamous Cell Carcinoma Etiology

Following are the etiological factors which lead to oral squamous cell carcinoma:

Tobacco smoking: Cigaretts, bidis, pipes, and cigars.

“Symptoms Of Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma”

Squamous cell carcinoma Reverse Smoking

  • Use of smokeless tobacco: Snuf dipping, gutkha, tobacco chewing, tobacco as a toothpaste.
  • Alcohol: Drinking spirits, drinking wines, drinking beers
  • Diet anal nutrition: VitaminA, B-complex and C defiiency,
  • Nutritional defiiency with alcoholism.
  • Dental factors: Chronic irritation from broken teeth, Illfitng or broken prosthesis.
  • Radiations: Actinic radiation, X-ray radiation
  • Viral infections: Herpes simplex virus (HSV), human papilloma virus (HPV), human immunodefiiency virus (HIV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)
  • Chronic infections: Candidiasis, syphilis
  • Genetic factors: Oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes
  • Pre-existing Oral diseases: Lichen planus, Plummer-Vinson
    Syndrome, DLE, OSMF

“Risk Factors For Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma”

Squamous cell carcinoma Clinical Features

  • Carcinomas mostly occur in the 4th to 7th decades of life.
  • Males are more commonly affcted
  • Lower lip is the most common site, the second most common site is the lateral border of the tongue. Among all intraoral sites, dorsum of the tongue and hard palate are the least common sites for oral squamous cell carcinoma.
  • The initial lesion may be asymptomatic or can be presented as white or red nodule or fissure over the oral mucosa.
  • Initially, the lesion is usually painless.
  • More advanced lesions present either as a fast enlarging,exophytic or invasive ulcer or sometimes as a large tumor mass or a verrucous growth.
  • Ulcerated lesion often shows persistent induration around the periphery with an elevated and everted margin.
  • The lesion can be painful either due to secondary infection or due to involvement of the peripheral nerves by the tumor cells. The lesion can also bleed easily.
  • Floor of the mouth lesions often cause fiation of the tongue to the underlying structures with diffilty in speech and inability to open the mouth.
  • When malignant tumor cells invade into the alveolar bone of either maxilla or mandible, they usually cause mobility or exfoliation of regional teeth.
  • Involvement of inferior alveolar nerve often causes paresthesia of the lower teeth and the lower lip.
  • Regional lymph nodes are often enlarged, tendered and fied; some ofthese nodes can be stony hard in consistency.
  • Untreated lesions may sometimes destroy the oral tissues and extend into the skin on the outer surface of the face to produce a nodular or lobulated growth on the facial skin, which appears as an extraoral discharging sinus.
  • Pathological fracture of the jaw bone may sometimes occur in untreated cases due to extensive destruction of the bone by the tumor.

“The Role Of Biopsies In Detecting Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma”

Histological Grading

Squamous cell carcinoma is divided in following categories by
Broader also known as Broader’s classifiation

  • Well-diffrentiated.
  • Moderately differentiated.
  • Poorly differentiated.

Well-differentiated Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Most of the squamous cell carcinomas histologically belong to the well-diffrentiated category.

  • In this lesion, the tumor epithelial cells to a large extent resemble the cells of the squamous epithelium both structurally and functionally.
  • Tumor cells produce large amount of keratin in the form of “keratin pearls”.
  • Tumor cells invade into the underlying connective tissue,where the cells proliferate further and give rise to the formation of many epithelial islands within the connective tissue stroma.
  • Tumor cells often exhibit dysplastic features like cellular pleomorphism, nuclear hyperchromatism, individual cell keratinization and altered nuclear-cytoplasmic ratio, loss of cohesion, etc.
  • Prognosis is better.

Moderately differentiated Squamous Cell Carcinoma

  • The tumor cells are usually more severely dysplastic than that of the well-diffrentiated type.
  • Tumor cells produce litte or no keratin and these cells exhibit greater number of mitotic cell divisions.
  • There is formation of epithelial islands or cell nests, etc. are diminished since these tumor cells do not differentiate or mature as much as the well-differentiated type of cells do.
  • This tumor also carries a reasonably good prognosis.

“Comprehensive Overview Of Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma Symptoms”

Poorly differentiated Squamous Cell Carcinoma

  • In poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma, the malignant tumor cells produce no keratin.
  • The tumor exhibits extensive cellular abnormalities with lack of normal architectural pattern and loss of intercellular
    bridges between the tumor cells.
  • Mitotic cell division is extremely high and because of this,the neoplastic cells are often very immature and primitive looking and it is often very difficult even to recognize them as squamous epithelial cells.
  • Prognosis is poor.

Filed Under: General Surgery

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