Oral Candidiasis and Fungal Infections
Oral candidiasis (oral thrush, candidosis) is a fungal infection of the oral mucosa caused chiefly by Candida species, most often Candida albicans, which are common commensals of the mouth that become pathogenic when local or systemic conditions favour overgrowth. It is the most frequent fungal infection of the oral cavity and presents in several clinical forms, while other oral mycoses are comparatively rare.
Definition
Oral candidiasis is an infection of the oral mucosa by Candida species, typically Candida albicans, occurring when the host-commensal balance shifts toward fungal overgrowth and tissue invasion of the superficial epithelium.
Scope
The topic covers the principal clinical forms of oral candidiasis (pseudomembranous, erythematous, hyperplastic, and the candida-associated lesions such as denture stomatitis and angular cheilitis), the predisposing local and systemic factors, and the role of candidiasis as a marker of immunosuppression. Deep and opportunistic mycoses with oral manifestations are noted as a contrast. The entry is descriptive reference material, not antifungal prescribing guidance.
Core questions
- What clinical forms does oral candidiasis take, and how are they recognised?
- Which local and systemic factors predispose to candidal overgrowth?
- How does candidiasis serve as a marker of immunosuppression or underlying disease?
- How is candidal infection distinguished from other white or red mucosal lesions?
Key concepts
- Candida as commensal versus pathogen
- Pseudomembranous candidiasis (thrush)
- Erythematous (atrophic) candidiasis
- Chronic hyperplastic candidiasis
- Denture stomatitis and angular cheilitis
- Predisposing host factors and immunosuppression
- Opportunistic and deep oral mycoses
Mechanisms
Candida species reside as harmless commensals in many healthy mouths; clinical infection follows a shift in the host-microbe balance brought about by local factors (denture wear, xerostomia, corticosteroid inhalers, antibiotics altering competing flora) or systemic factors (immunosuppression, diabetes, nutritional deficiency, extremes of age). The organism's transition to a hyphal, invasive form and adhesion to epithelium underlie the wipeable pseudomembranes of thrush and the inflammatory erythema of atrophic forms. Because impaired host defence permits overgrowth, oral candidiasis can be an early clinical marker of immunosuppression, including HIV disease.
Clinical relevance
Recognising oral candidiasis matters because its clinical forms can mimic other mucosal diseases and because its appearance may signal an underlying predisposing condition warranting evaluation. This entry describes how candidal and other oral fungal infections are categorised and diagnosed; it is reference material and not a basis for selecting antifungal therapy for an individual.
Epidemiology
Oral candidiasis is the most common oral fungal infection, with carriage of Candida in a large share of healthy people and symptomatic infection concentrated among denture wearers, infants, older adults, and immunosuppressed populations; its frequency rose with the HIV epidemic, where pseudomembranous candidiasis is a recognised oral manifestation.
Evidence & guidelines
Management of candidiasis, including oropharyngeal disease, is addressed in clinical practice guidelines such as the Infectious Diseases Society of America update, while diagnostic classification of oral forms draws on oral pathology and oral medicine textbooks; this entry summarises that classification without reproducing prescribing recommendations.
History
Oral thrush has been recognised clinically for centuries, and twentieth-century oral medicine refined the classification of candidal infection into pseudomembranous, erythematous, and hyperplastic forms and identified the candida-associated lesions of denture stomatitis and angular cheilitis.
Debates
- Does chronic hyperplastic candidiasis carry malignant potential?
- Chronic hyperplastic candidiasis presents as a white plaque that does not wipe away and may show epithelial dysplasia, raising the question of whether candidal infection contributes to or marks malignant potential, an association that remains incompletely resolved.
Related topics
Seminal works
- pappas-2016
- neville-2016
Frequently asked questions
- Is Candida always abnormal in the mouth?
- No. Candida species are common commensals in healthy mouths; they cause disease only when local or systemic conditions allow them to overgrow and invade the surface epithelium.
- Why can oral thrush be a warning sign?
- Because candidal overgrowth depends on impaired host defence, oral candidiasis can be an early indicator of an underlying predisposing condition such as immunosuppression, diabetes, or HIV infection, prompting further evaluation.