Chemotherapy and Your Mouth
Are You Being Treated With Chemotherapy for Cancer?
If so, this booklet can help you. While chemotherapy helps treat cancer, it can also cause other things to happen in your body called side effects. Some of these problems affect the mouth and could cause you to delay or stop treatment.
This booklet will tell you ways to help prevent mouth problems so you'll get the most from your cancer treatment.
To help prevent serious problems, see a dentist at least 2 weeks before starting chemotherapy.

How Does Chemotherapy Affect the Mouth?
Chemotherapy is the use of drugs to treat cancer. These drugs kill cancer cells, but they may also harm normal cells, including cells in the mouth. Side effects include problems with your teeth and gums; the soft, moist lining of your mouth; and the glands that make saliva (spit).
It's important to know that side effects in the mouth can be serious.
-
The side effects can hurt and make it hard to eat, talk, and swallow.
-
You are more likely to get an infection, which can be dangerous when you are receiving cancer treatment.
-
If the side effects are bad, you may not be able to keep up with your cancer treatment. Your doctor may need to cut back on your cancer treatment or may even stop it.
What Mouth Problems Does Chemotherapy Cause?
You may have certain side effects in your mouth from chemotherapy. Another person may have different problems. The problems depend on the chemotherapy drugs and how your body reacts to them. You may have these problems only during treatment or for a short time after treatment ends.
Why Should I See a Dentist?
You may be surprised that your dentist is important in your cancer treatment. If you go to the dentist before chemotherapy begins, you can help prevent serious mouth problems. Side effects often happen because a person's mouth is not healthy before chemotherapy starts. Not all mouth problems can be avoided but the fewer side effects you have, the more likely you will stay on your cancer treatment schedule.
It's important for your dentist and cancer doctor to talk to each other about your cancer treatment. Be sure to give your dentist your cancer doctor's phone number.
When Should I See a Dentist?
You need to see the dentist at least 2 weeks before chemotherapy begins. If you have already started chemotherapy and didn't go to a dentist, see one as soon as possible.
What Will the Dentist and Dental Hygienist Do?

What Can I Do To Keep My Mouth Healthy?
You can do a lot to keep your mouth healthy during chemotherapy. The first step is to see a dentist before you start cancer treatment. Once your treatment starts, it's important to look in your mouth every day for sores or other changes. These tips can help prevent and treat a sore mouth:
Keep your mouth moist.
Clean your mouth, tongue, and gums.
-
Brush your teeth, gums, and tongue with an extra-soft toothbrush after every meal and at bedtime. If brushing hurts, soften the bristles in warm water.
-
Use a fluoride toothpaste.
-
Don't use mouthwashes with alcohol in them.
-
Floss your teeth gently every day. If your gums bleed and hurt, avoid the areas that are bleeding or sore, but keep flossing your other teeth.
-
Rinse your mouth several times a day with a solution of 1/4 teaspoon baking soda and 1/8 teaspoon salt in one cup of warm water. Follow with a plain water rinse.
-
Dentures that don't fit well can cause problems. Talk to your cancer doctor or dentist about your dentures.
If Your Mouth Is Sore, Watch What You Eat and Drink.
-
Choose foods that are good for you and easy to chew and swallow.
-
Take small bites of food, chew slowly, and sip liquids with your meals.
-
Eat soft, moist foods such as cooked cereals, mashed potatoes, and scrambled eggs.
-
If you have trouble swallowing, soften your food with gravy, sauces, broth, yogurt, or other liquids.

Call Your Doctor or Nurse When Your Mouth Hurts.
-
Work with them to find medicines to help control the pain.
-
If the pain continues, talk to your cancer doctor about stronger medicines.
Remember To Stay Away From
-
Sharp, crunchy foods, like taco chips, that could scrape or cut your mouth.
-
Foods that are hot, spicy, or high in acid, like citrus fruits and juices, which can irritate your mouth.
-
Sugary foods, like candy or soda, that could cause cavities.
-
Toothpicks, because they can cut your mouth.
-
All tobacco products.
-
Alcoholic drinks.
Do Children Get Mouth Problems Too?
Chemotherapy causes other side effects in children, depending on the child's age.
Problems with teeth are the most common. Permanent teeth may be slow to come in and may look different from normal teeth. Teeth may fall out. The dentist will check your child's jaws for any growth problems.
Before chemotherapy begins, take your child to a dentist. The dentist will check your child's mouth carefully and pull loose teeth or those that may become loose during treatment. Ask the dentist or hygienist what you can do to help your child with mouth care.

Remember:
-
Visit your dentist before your cancer treatment starts.
-
Take good care of your mouth during treatment.
-
Talk regularly with your cancer doctor and dentist about any mouth problems you have.

Acknowledgments
The individuals listed here provided assistance in developing, reviewing, and field testing all of the campaign publications. The campaign sponsors would like to thank them for their contributions.
Scientific Committee
|
Gerry Barker, R.D.H., M.A. University of Missouri-Kansas City Kansas City, MO
|
Deborah McGuire, R.N., Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA
|
|
Susan L. Beck, R.N., Ph.D., A.O.C.N. University of Utah Salt Lake City, UT
|
Douglas Peterson, D.M.D., Ph.D. University of Connecticut Farmington, CT
|
|
Marylin Dodd, R.N., Ph.D. University of California, San Francisco San Francisco, CA
|
Mark M. Schubert, D.D.S., M.S.D. University of Washington Seattle, WA
|
|
Joel Epstein, D.M.D., M.S.D., F.R.C.D. University of Washington Seattle, WA
|
John Wingard, M.D. University of Florida Gainesville, FL
|
|
Philip Fox, D.D.S. Bethesda, MD
|
|
Field Testers
|
Olubunmi Abayomi, M.D. Howard University Hospital Washington, DC
|
Nancy E. Leupold, M.S. Support for People with Oral and Head and Neck Cancer (SPOHNC) Locust Valley, NY
|
|
Alice Bass, B.S.N., O.C.N. Greater Southeast Community Hospital Washington, DC
|
Alice Mahan, B.S., R.T.T. Howard University Hospital Washington, DC
|
|
Betsy Bischoff, R.N., M.S. Georgetown University Medical Center Washington, DC
|
MiKaela Olsen, R.N., M.S., O.C.N. UCSF Stanford Health Care Stanford, CA
|
|
Andrea Bonnick, D.D.S. Howard University Washington, DC
|
Peter Passero, D.D.S. Prizm Dental Partners and Management Group McLean, VA
|
|
Dorothy Chesley, R.N., Ph.D. Texas Nursing Foundation Austin, TX
|
K. Vendrell Rankin, D.D.S. Baylor College of Dentistry Dallas, TX
|
This information is part of a series on managing and preventing oral complications of cancer treatment. The series was developed in partnership with the National Cancer Institute, the National Institute of Nursing Research, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Friends of the NIDCR.
Other publications in this series include:
For Health Professionals
For Patients
|
This information is not copyrighted. Print and make as many photocopies as you need.
"Chemotherapy and Your Mouth" is also available as a booklet. Click here to order a free copy.
NIH Publication No. 02-4361
Last Reviewed May 2005
Oral Health & Wellness Content provided by NIH
|