Oral cancer exams
 / Courtesy: NBC News
A trip to the dentist can be more than filling cavities and whitening teeth. Did you know a dental exam could actually save your life?
At the dental clinic at Nova Southeast University, dental students are doing more than taking care of teeth. They're performing thorough oral cancer exams on every patient under the supervision of a dentist on faculty. "Fifty years ago dentists weren't trained specifically to do this. Starting in 2013, every dentist that comes out of dental schools in the United States will be trained to do it," said Dr. Michael Siegel, a dentist.
From a patient's perspective, most are uninformed about oral cancer even though there will be 40,000 new cases this year. "I don't know that much about it," said Thomas Jordan, a patient. "I haven't heard about it. My dentist never talked to me about it," said patient Vanessa Pedroso.
Assistant professor, Dr. Khadine Alston is passionate about putting oral cancer on the map. She's organized walkathons in New York and South Florida. "We want to number one inform the community about oral cancer, what are the risk factors," Dr. Alston said. "We want to get especially people who are not likely to go to the dentist to know the importance of having such an exam and how it could impact and save their lives."
Risk factors include tobacco and alcohol use, especially when the two are combined. HPV, the human papilloma virus has also been linked to oral cancer.
Signs and symptoms include a sore that doesn't heal, a red or white patch that persists, a lump or thickening in the mouth or neck. "If you catch a tumor really early, 95 percent of the people are alive five years later. If you get it late, less than one in five is alive," said Siegel.
Has your dentist talked to you about oral cancer? Is it something you're concerned about? Leave your thoughts below.
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Information courtesy of NBC News