Treatment includes correcting electrolyte abnormalities and, more importantly, addressing underlying emotional issues to stop purging episodes. Psychiatric input and social support are invaluable. Parotid gland swelling generally improves with cessation of vomiting episodes.
Ask: Is the patient in pain?
Causes of salivary gland pain include sialolithiasis, sialadenitis, and recurrent parotitis of childhood. Pain occurs secondary to stretching of the fibrous capsule in which the parotid or submandibular gland is surrounded, compression of pain fibers by an expanding mass, or infiltration of nerves by neoplasia.
Sialolithiasis. Sialolithiasis, or salivary stones, are primarily calcium carbonate concentrations within the salivary ductal system. More than 80% occur in the submandibular gland or duct9 as a result of production of mixed mucoid and serous saliva and a tortuous duct path.
Patients usually present with a history of intermittent swelling and pain of the involved gland associated with eating. Increased production of saliva during meals, which then passes through a partially obstructed salivary duct, leads to salivary retention and glandular swelling. Thus, a recurring pattern can develop, with varying periods of remission,7 eventually leading to an acute suppurative process or sialadenitis (described below). Chronic salivary disease can also be caused by stricture of a duct or, rarely, external compression by a tumor mass.
Examination often reveals an enlarged and often tender gland; conversely, chronic disease can lead to gland atrophy. Usually, only minimal saliva is able to be expressed from an obstructed duct. For a submandibular duct stone, bimanual palpation might reveal its position if it is located distally in the floor of the mouth; a proximal stone might not be palpable.
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