Oral mucosal blood flow in patients with burning mouth syndrome

Abstract
The pathophysiology of burning mouth syndrome (BMS) is largely unknown. Thus, the aim was to study oral mucosal blood flow in BMS-patients using laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF). Thirteen BMS patients (11 female, two male; mean age±SD 64.3±7.9 years, mean disease duration 18.9±6.2 months) and 13 healthy non-smoking controls matched for age and gender (11 female, two male; mean age 64.7±8.1 years) were investigated. Using the LDF technique mucosal blood flow (mBF) was measured at the hard palate, the tip of the tongue, on the midline of the oral vestibule, and on the lip. Measurements were made at rest and over 2 min following dry ice application of 10 s duration using a pencil shaped apparatus. In addition, blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), peripheral cutaneous blood flow, and transcutaneous pCO2 were continuously recorded. Mucosal blood flow (mBF) increased at all measurement sites in response to dry ice application (PF[1,24]=13.9, P<0.001). Dry ice stimulation appears to be an effective, non-invasive and reasonably tolerable means to investigate mucosal blood flow at different mucosal sites. In general, vasoreactivity in BMS patients was higher than in healthy controls. BMS patients exhibited a higher response on the hard palate compared to controls. These changes in oral blood flow appear to be specifically related to BMS symptoms indicating a disturbed vasoreactivity.