Oral Cancers Diagnosis: Nasoendoscopy, Fine-needle Aspiration Cytology and CT Scan | SingHealth Duke-NUS Head and Neck Centre
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Mouth Cancer

Mouth Cancer - How to prevent?

Mouth Cancer - Diagnosis

How is mouth cancer diagnosed?

A thorough head and neck examination is performed which includes examination of the oral cavity, the neck and a nasoendoscopy. 

A biopsy of the oral cavity lesion is then performed under local anesthesia as a clinic procedure. A fine needle aspiration cytology is also performed on any neck node. 

Either a computed tomography scan or magnetic resonance imaging (CT or MRI) is done to evaluate the extent of the oral cavity lesion and possible neck node involvement. If the biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of cancer, then a CT scan of the thorax and liver are done as part of the staging work-up, looking for distant spread to the lungs or the liver.

Mouth Cancer - Preparing for surgery

Mouth Cancer - Post-surgery care

Mouth Cancer - Other Information

The information provided is not intended as medical advice. Terms of use. Information provided by SingHealth

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