
Oral Cancer Screening and Early Detection
- General health history, including a list of current medications and allergies.
- Oral and lifestyle habits, with reference to quantity, frequency, and duration of tobacco use and alcohol consumption.
- Symptoms of oral pain or discomfort.
What to Expect During an Oral Cancer Screening
Neck Inspection
Lymph Node Examination
Lips and Perioral Tissue Examination
Oral Soft Tissue Cancer Screening
Symptoms of Oral Cancer
Diagnosis and Treatment
Oral cancer screenings involve an examination of the oral cavity as a whole – not just your teeth. This helps detect cancerous and pre-cancerous conditions.
If the early stages of oral cancer are detected, it is typically treated with surgery or radiation. Advanced cases will combine surgery and radiation as the most common treatment. In the late stages, radiation and chemotherapy are the usual combination, with or without surgery.
Prevention
With all cancers, the best way to prevent oral cancer starts with you – avoid all tobacco products, only drink alcohol in moderation, maintain a healthy and balanced diet, and limit your exposure to the sun (this is significantly more important than sunblock, because sunblock can only be as effective as your ability to properly apply it, while limited exposure always works best).
There is also a link between certain types of the HPV virus and throat cancer. Avoiding risky behavior and receiving the HPV vaccine can be considered to help prevent this cancer.