“…[1][2][3][4] Some of the suspected diagnoses for such cases may be median rhomboid glossitis, chronic atrophic candidiasis, chronic pseudomembranous candidiasis, irritation fibroma, mucocoele, granular cell tumor, tertiary syphilis, lingual thyroid, transient lingual papillitis, scarlet fever or group I streptococcal oropharyngitis, drug reaction, and possibly even squamous cell carcinoma. [5][6][7] Both chronic atrophic candidiasis and chronic pseudomembranous candidiasis respond to oral antifungal drugs and furthermore even medial rhomboid glossitis is thought to have a candidial etiology. 8 All three are known to produce glossodynia.…”