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  2. What’s With the Dry, Cracked Corners of Your Mouth ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/lips-always-dry-may...

    How to Prevent Angular Cheilitis To limit the effects of saliva pooling in the corners of your mouth, use a lip balm, Dr. Rubin says. Lip balms will also help prevent it from coming back.

  3. Angular cheilitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_cheilitis

    This form angular cheilitis which is caused by Candida is sometimes termed "Candida-associated angular cheilitis", [11] or less commonly, "monilial perlèche". [2] Angular cheilitis can also be classified as acute (sudden, short-lived appearance of the condition) or chronic (lasts a long time or keeps returning), or refractory (the condition ...

  4. Cheilitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheilitis

    Photographic Comparison of: 1) a canker sore – inside the mouth, 2) herpes labialis, 3) angular cheilitis and 4) chapped lips. [4] Chapped lips (also known as cheilitis simplex [5] or common cheilitis) [6] is characterized by the cracking, fissuring, and peeling of the skin of the lips, and is one of the most common types of cheilitis.

  5. Common Causes of Stomatitis, a Painful Inflammatory Condition

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    Angular cheilitis This form of stomatitis causes irritation and cracks in the corners of your mouth. It may be caused by a fungal or bacterial infection, or excessive moisture, says Dr. Man.

  6. Oral candidiasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_candidiasis

    Oral candidiasis (Acute pseudomembranous candidiasis), which is also known as oral thrush, among other names, [1] is candidiasis that occurs in the mouth. That is, oral candidiasis is a mycosis (yeast/fungal infection) of Candida species on the mucous membranes of the mouth.

  7. If You Notice This One Thing While You're Eating, Talk to ...

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    Medications like NSAIDs or antibiotics, such as doxycycline, can cause inflammation in the esophagus. Infections, such as strep throat or thrush, can cause swallowing problems affecting the throat.

  8. Gastrointestinal disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastrointestinal_disease

    Several GI diseases, especially those associated with malabsorption, can cause recurrent mouth ulcers, atrophic glossitis, and angular cheilitis (e.g., Crohn's disease is sometimes termed orofacial granulomatosis when it involves the mouth alone). Sideropenic dysphagia can cause glossitis, angular cheilitis. [3]

  9. Candida tropicalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candida_tropicalis

    Colonies of C. tropicalis on a Petri dish.. C. tropicalis is a vegetative cell [10] with the shape from round to oval ranging from approximately 2 – 10 micrometers. [3] A mould exhibits dimorphism [8] forming a single-celled yeast or so-called blastoconidia which reproduces by simple budding. [8]