Healthy Mouths
12/22/2004 Jennifer Barrett Ozols Newsweek Health (msnbc.com) New screening tools could help dentists save lives through the early detection of oral cancer. Should insurance companies be paying for the tests? A couple weeks before he was scheduled to have his teeth cleaned, Gerald Zember felt a slight pain in the back of his mouth. The retired lawyer figured he had burnt his tongue sipping hot soup or developed an ulcer from one too many spicy meals. And at first glance, Zember’s Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., dentist, William Balanoff, didn't notice anything unusual during a routine examination—until he pulled out a new oral-cancer screening tool called ViziLite. After Zember rinsed with a raspberry-flavored acetic solution, Balanoff inserted a ViziLite light stick into his patient’s mouth. Suddenly, a tiny white lesion became visible on the side of Zember's tongue. "It was tiny, but I couldn't explain it away," says Balanoff, since Zember had no history of canker sores that could have left such a mark. Zember, 78, did have a history of smoking, though, which put him at higher risk for oral cancer. So Balanoff referred him to an oral surgeon to have the lesion checked out. A biopsy revealed the cells were cancerous. "It was so tiny, I might not have noticed it until a year or a year and a half later [once it had grown]," says Balanoff. "By then, it would have been a stage-three cancer, and his chances wouldn't have been that good." About 30,000 Americans will be diagnosed [...]