Herpetic stomatitis

Stomatitis of various origins Herpetic lesions of the oral mucosa can occur either independently or as a concomitant disease with various infectious, inflammatory, allergic, toxic processes in the body, which, even before stomatitis, themselves cause a significant reaction from the entire immune system. This group of diseases includes enteroviruses (epidemic or adenoviral colitis, respiratory forms with intestinal syndrome, intestinal dysbiosis), herpes viruses (cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus type 2, congenital infections of newborns: neonatal, congenital, perinatal herpes), herpes type I ( herpetic sore throat), as well as mycoplasma, parvovirus B19, chlamydia. More rare causes include measles, rubella, reactive vitamin deficiency C, radiation injury - all this serves as a background for stomatitis of varying severity. Any of these groups of infections, starting acutely, with inadequate or incomplete treatment, can turn into chronic, lasting for a long time in a state of inflammation, exudation, and thereby gingivostomatitis. This model of the disease is typical for acquired stomatitis of unknown origin. It is also possible that the oral mucosa can be independently damaged by a herpetic virus. There are primary (benign induration not in an immunologically immature person), secondary (habitual, prolonged, recurrent and chronic) stomatitis. According to the clinical course, the spread of the lesion, the method of formation (breakthrough, ulceration, lysis) of erosions and blisters,