Oral pain that feels like a scalded mouth and can last for months has baffled dental researchers since the 1970s, when burning oral sensations were linked to mucosal, periodontal and restorative disorders, and mental or emotional causes.
It’s called burning mouth syndrome (BMS), and it’s gaining the attention of such dental researchers as oral pain expert Andres Pinto, who recently joined ÐÓ°ÉÊÓÆµâ€™s School of Dental Medicine faculty.
What’s frustrates patients and doctors alike, said Pinto, is that the mouth and gums appear normal with BMS, so its diagnosis is difficult. Patients often find themselves having to visit several doctors before finally arriving at BMS as the cause.
Pinto, the new chair and an associate professor in the Department of Oral Diagnosis and Radiology at the dental school and an oral medical specialist in the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at University Hospitals Case Medical Center, encourages people with persistent mouth pain to check for the following symptoms that might be caused by BMS:
- Persistent burning tongue and oral pain with no apparent dental cause
- Abnormal taste or dry feeling in the mouth
- Symptoms that disappear when eating
- Burning sensations that may migrate across several oral areas