“…Xerostomic patients complain mostly about burning mouth, loss of taste, difficulty in swallowing, unpleasant taste and odor, oral dryness, increased thirst, chewing, speaking, gastroesophageal reflux, oral breathing, malfunction of removable prosthesis and sensitive teeth (49)(50)(51)(52)(53)(54) with the interaction of the glandular cell with its extracellular matrix sectional descriptive observational study that patients with SS have voice, speech and swallowing abnormalities, not only associated with to xerosis but perhaps also to neurological abnormalities, probably secondary to the syndrome (55). On the other hand, subjective xerostomia has been reported in higher percentages (75.18% to 91.84%) in patients with SS (56).…”