An afebrile 23-year-old man with no cervical gland enlargement presented with the very painful, large, shallow, yellowish-based ulcer shown here.
Classification. Aphthae are classified into three types:
Therapy. Generally, no treatment is needed for aphthous stomatitis. The pain eases within a week of onset, and the lesions resolve in about 14 days. Lesion pain and irritation from teeth and food can be treated by a tetracycline-triamcinolone mouthwash. Topical anesthetic or corticosteroid therapy may be helpful.
Figure 4 shows an ulcer on the right soft palate of a 38-year-old woman who had experienced pain in the right side of her palate and neck. Her cervical glands were not enlarged.
An afebrile 23-year-old man with no cervical gland enlargement presented with the very painful, large, shallow, yellowish-based ulcer shown in Figure 5; there was surrounding injection at the left anterior tonsillar pillar. The lesion responded to treatment with tetracycline and triamcinolone mouthwash.
The aphthae on the right anterior tonsillar pillar in Figure 6 was the cause of this 35-year-old woman’s “most severe sore throat.” She was afebrile, with bilateral anterior cervical gland enlargement that was tender only on the right side.
FluMist Intranasal Flu Vaccine Now Available for At-Home Delivery and Self-Administration
August 18th 2025AstraZeneca launches FluMist Home, the first FDA-approved at-home flu vaccine service, allowing self- or caregiver administration of the intranasal influenza vaccine for the 2025–26 season.