Oral Cancer is a serious threat. Help us fight it today!
Woodland Hills Dental Center - 5312 Comercio Lane, Suite A, Woodland Hills, CA 91364 - Phone 1-818-961-0051 - Fax 1-818-703-1998
Home    Lumineers   Veneers   Dental Implants    Zoom Whitening


ADA/OralCDx Campaign

The ADA, in collaboration with OralCDx Laboratories is embarking on a three-year nationwide public service campaign to boost public awareness of oral cancer and spotlight the dentist’s role in helping to stop this disease years before it can even start. Further information on this campaign was made available to the press and public during a Satellite Media Tour held on November 6, 2007. 

Your dentist has recent good news about progress against cancer. It is now easier than ever to detect oral cancer early, when the opportunity for a cure is great. Only half of all patients diagnosed with oral cancer survive more than five years.
Your dentist has the skills and tools to ensure that early signs of cancer and pre-cancerous conditions are identified. You and your dentist can fight and win the battle against oral cancer. Know the early signs and see your dentist regularly.

  • Oral Cancer often starts as a tiny, unnoticed white or red spot or sore anywhere in the mouth.
  • It can affect any area of the oral cavity including the lips, gum tissue, check lining, tongue and the hard or soft palate.
  • Other signs include:
    • A sore that bleeds easily or does not heal
    • A color change of the oral tissues
    • A lump, thickening, rough spot, crust or small eroded area
    • Pain, tenderness, or numbness anywhere in the mouth or on the lips
    • Difficulty chewing, swallowing, speaking or moving the jaw or tongue.
    • A change in the way the teeth fit together
  • Oral Cancer most often occurs in those who use tobacco in any form.
  • Alcohol use combined with smoking greatly increases risk.
  • Prolonged exposure to the sun increases the risk of lip cancer.
  • More than 25% of oral cancers occur in people who do not smoke and have no other risk factors.
  • Oral Cancer is more likely to strike after age 40.
  • Studies suggest that a diet high in fruits and vegetables may prevent the development of potentially cancerous lesions.

Oral cancer screening is a routine part of a dental examination. Regular check-ups, including an examination of the entire mouth, are essential in the early detection of cancerous and pre-cancerous conditions. You may have a very small, but dangerous, oral spot or sore and not be aware of it.

Your dentist will carefully examine the inside of your mouth and tongue and in some patients may notice a flat, painless, white or red spot or a small sore. Although most of these are harmless, some are not. Harmful oral spots or sores often look identical to those that are harmless, but testing can tell them apart. If you have a sore with a likely cause, your dentist may treat it and ask you to return for re-examination.

Dentists often will notice a spot or sore that looks harmless and does not have a clear cause. To ensure that a spot or sore is not dangerous, your dentist may choose to perform a simple test, such as a BrushTest. As powerful as a pap smear, which detects abnormal cells in women, a BrushTest collects cells from a suspicious lesion in the mouth. The cells are sent to a laboratory for analysis. If precancerous cells are found, the lesion can be surgically removed if necessary during a separate procedure. It’s important to know that all atypical and positive results from a BrushTest must be confirmed by incisional biopsy and histology.

  • Oral cancer strikes an estimated 34,360 Americans each year.  An estimated 7,550 people (5,180 men and 2,370 women) will die of these cancers in 2007.
  • More than 25% of the 30,000 Americans who get oral cancer will die of the disease.
  • Oral cancer is as common as leukemia and claims more lives that either melanoma or cervical cancer.
  • On average, only half of those diagnosed with the disease will survive more than five years.
  • African-Americans are especially vulnerable; the incidence rate is 1/3 higher than whites and the mortality rate is almost twice as high.

Risk Factors

  • Although the use of tobacco and alcohol are risk factors in developing oral cancer, approximately 25% of oral cancer patients have no known risk factors.
  • There has been a nearly five-fold increase in incidence in oral cancer patients under age 40, many with no known risk factors.
  • The incidence of oral cancer in women has increased significantly, largely due to an increase in women smoking. In 1950 the male to female ratio was 6:1; by 2002, it was 2:1.

Prevention and Detection

  • The best way to prevent oral cancer is to avoid tobacco and alcohol use.
  • Regular dental check-ups, including an examination of the entire mouth, are essential in the early detection of cancerous and pre-cancerous conditions.
  • Many types of abnormal cells can develop in the oral cavity in the form of red or white spots.  Some are harmless and benign, some are cancerous and others are pre-cancerous, meaning they can develop into cancer if not detected early and removed. (American Cancer Society)
  • Finding and removing epithelial dysplasias before they become cancer can be one of the most effective methods for reducing the incidence and mortality of cancer.
  • Knowing the risk factors and seeing your dentist for oral cancer screenings can help prevent this deadly disease. Routine use of the Pap smear since 1955, for example, dramatically reduced the incidence and mortality rates for cervical cancer in the United States.  Similarly, use of colonoscopy now makes it possible to detect dysplastic polyps years before they can turn into colon cancer and is contributing to falling rates of mortality for the disease.
  • Oral cancer is often preceded by the presence of clinically identifiable premalignant changes. These lesions may present as either white or red patches or spots. Identifying white and red spots that show dysplasia and removing them before they become cancer is an effective method for reducing the incidence and mortality of cancer.
    References
  1. American Cancer Society.
  2. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, website 2007.
  3. American Cancer Society web page.
  4. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, website 2007.
  5. American Cancer Society, Facts and Figures for African-Americans.
  6. Schantz SP, Yu GP. Head and neck cancer incidence trends in young Americans, 1973-1997, with a special analysis for tongue cancer. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. Mar 2002;128(3):268-274.
  7. Lingen M, Sturgis EM, Kies MS. Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck in nonsmokers: clinical and biologic characteristics and implications for management. Curr Opin Oncol. May 2001;13(3):176-182.
  8. Shiboski CH, Shiboski SC, Silverman S, Jr. Trends in oral cancer rates in the United States, 1973-1996. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. Aug 2000;28(4):249-25.
  9. Llewellyn CD, Johnson NW, Warnakulasuriya KA. Risk factors for squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity in young people–a comprehensive literature review. Oral Oncol. Jul 2001;37(5):401-418.
  10. Corcoran TP, Whiston DA. Oral cancer in young adults. J Am Dent Assoc. Jun 2000;131(6):726.
  11. Dahlstrom, K. R et al. Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck in never smoker-never drinkers: A descriptive epidemiologic study. Head Neck 2007.
  12. American Cancer Society (“In the United States, the cervical cancer death rate declined by 74% between 1955 and 1992, in large part due to the effectiveness of Pap smear screening.”) web facts.
  13. Neville BW and Day TA. Oral cancer and precancerous lesions. CA Cancer J Clin 2002; 52:195-215.

Please note: The ADA does not provide specific answers to individual questions about fees, dental problems, conditions, diagnoses, treatments or proposed treatments, or requests for research. Information about dental referrals, complaints and a variety of dental procedures may be found here. You can also refer to our Frequently Asked Questions page for answers to common questions.

Articles

Featured Service


LUMINEERS


LumineersLumineers are contact lens thin materials used to cover stained, worn, deformed, chipped teeth to produce near instant results made of cerinate porcelain material. This decreases thickness while increasing material strength.

More about Lumineers

SMILE GALLERY

  
  

Thank You for your interest in our Woodland Hills Dentist office. The entire dental staff is dedicated not only to restoring patient's teeth and gums to health, but focuses on preventative care and patient education. Our office has a small, friendly atmosphere that puts our patients at ease. You won't find a crowded waiting room or have trouble scheduling timely appointments at this Woodland Hills Dentist. Our Dentists have over 1500 credit hours in numerous specialties including Esthetic and Cosmetic Dentistry, Root Canal Therapy, Crown and Bridge, Dental veneers, Teeth Whitening, Porcelain Crowns, Periodontics, Prosthetics and Pain Management.

When you walk into our Woodland Hills Dentist office you are the most important person. That's why we work diligently to make you feel welcome and comfortable. You are never an interruption to our work, but rather the reason we work so hard. Our Woodland Hills Dentist team approach assures your involvement in every dental decision, from determining your needs, to establishing a dental care plan. Our commitment is to provide you the highest standard of personalized dental care with a gentle, efficient and professional manner as a Woodland Hills Dentist. We trust you will find the atmosphere calming, the staff friendly, and our dental services exceptional.

At Woodland Hills Dentist Group our mission is to provide our patients the very best dental care in the most caring, supportive, and nurturing manner possible. We also believe in promoting long-term dental-health through the most superior treatment available. To that end, we employ highly-qualified dental professionals and utilize leading-edge technologies. We listen carefully to our patients, and partner with them to maintain their dental health. Our focus on aesthetic and cosmetic techniques further supports this commitment to provide the best overall long-term dental care, and to enable our patients to look and feel their best. Choose Woodland Hills Dentist group for all your Esthetic and Cosmetic Dentistry, Root Canal Therapy, Crown and Bridge, Dental veneers, Teeth Whitening, Procelain Crowns and Periodontics needs. Give us a call today, you deserve it.

 

Our ClinicOur services

We offer top of the line dental procedures developed to give you the whitest, picture-perfect smile with no pain or at least the least pain possible.

Some of our services include:

 

Our PracticeTestimonials

Not sure if we are really as good as we say we are? Don't take our word for it.

Read the words coming out of mouths whose smiles (and lives) we have touched and changed with the miracle that is modern dentistry.

Look at how cosmetic dentistry has evolved enough to allow for the best results, near-instantly, with almost no discomfort.

 

Meet the Woodland DentistOur Dentist

Among the best in his field, your Woodland Hills dentist, Dr. Chaves is more than ready and willing to provide you with expert dental care.

Dr. John Chaves enjoys a passion for his work that is evident to all of his patients. His commitment to providing the finest dental care available with distinction and utmost compassion.

Woodland Hills Lumineers Dentist 

More Woodland Hills Dental Services Woodland Hills Client Testimonials Woodland Hills Dentist
Home | Dentist | Services | Gallery | Map | Sitemap | Tarzana Dentist | Encino Dentist | Tarzana Cosmetic Dentist | Contact

The American Dental Association is undertaking the fight against oral cancer, drop us a line to get to know more about oral cancer and what you can do to fight it.