In Mexico, salivary Gland Stones is managed by ents. Salivary gland stones (sialolithiasis) are calcified concretions that form within a major salivary gland duct or parenchyma, obstructing saliva flow and producing the characteristic story of painful gland swelling that flares at mealtimes and settles between meals. Population-based prevalence is approximately 1 case per 10,000-30,000 per year (Escudier 2008; Lustmann 1990), with roughly 12 in 1,000 adults harboring asymptomatic small stones found incidentally on imaging.
Salivary gland stones (ICD-10: K11.5, sialolithiasis) are calcified deposits composed predominantly of calcium phosphate and calcium carbonate within an organic matrix of glycoproteins, mucopolysaccharides, and cellular debris. The condition results from a combination of saliva stasis, increased viscosity, alkaline pH, and a nidus (sloughed epithelium, bacteria, or food debris) on which mineral deposition occurs. The submandibular gland is preferentially affected because Wharton's duct is long (5-6 cm), curves upward against gravity, has a narrow papilla orifice, and produces mucinous saliva with relatively high calcium and bicarbonate. Parotid stones form within Stensen's duct or the gland parenchyma and tend to be smaller and multiple.
The key symptoms of Salivary Gland Stones are: Painful swelling of the affected gland that develops within minutes of starting a meal, peaks during eating, and gradually resolves over 1-2 hours (mealtime syndrome) — the most reliable clinical clue., Palpable hard mass under the jaw (submandibular) or in front of and below the ear (parotid) that may be tender on bimanual examination of the floor of mouth., Recurrent episodes of acute gland swelling with sour, gritty, or salty taste at mealtimes and intermittent pus from the ductal papilla., Visible stone protruding at the ductal orifice (Wharton's or Stensen's), especially in floor-of-mouth bimanual examination., Reduced salivary flow and a sense of dry mouth on the affected side as obstruction progresses., Acute bacterial sialadenitis with fever, erythema, induration, purulent discharge from the duct, and trismus, particularly when obstruction is prolonged or incomplete., Persistent firm gland on the affected side from chronic fibrosis, sometimes raising concern for tumor..
Diagnosis is usually possible from history alone. The triad of recurrent mealtime swelling, post-prandial pain, and a palpable mass in the affected gland is highly specific for sialolithiasis. Bimanual examination of the floor of mouth — one finger inside, the other outside — palpates large submandibular stones and assesses ductal tenderness. Inspection of the ductal papilla may show a visible stone, purulent discharge, or stenosis. Once history and exam suggest stones, imaging confirms location, size, and number. Plain dental radiographs (occlusal view) detect approximately 80% of submandibular stones but only 60% of parotid stones because parotid stones are more often radiolucent. Ultrasound is the first-line imaging modality in most centers because it is non-invasive, available, and approximately 85-94% sensitive and 90-97% specific for stones over 2 mm (Brown 2016). Sialography — injection of iodinated contrast into the duct — was the traditional standard but is now replaced by MR sialography or CT sialography for non-invasive ductal mapping. Cone-beam CT detects radiopaque stones and small intraglandular stones. Diagnostic sialendoscopy (a 0.8-1.6 mm semi-rigid endoscope) is both diagnostic and therapeutic, performed under local or general anesthesia. Salivary scintigraphy and FDG-PET are reserved for atypical cases. Important differential diagnoses to exclude are salivary gland tumor (firm, persistent, non-fluctuant), Sjögren syndrome (bilateral, dry eyes and mouth, autoantibodies), and chronic recurrent juvenile parotitis (pediatric, no stones, sialectasis on imaging).
Outlook is excellent in most cases. Stones under 3-4 mm pass spontaneously in up to 50% of patients with hydration and sialogogues. Gland-preserving techniques — sialendoscopy alone or combined with transoral or laser approaches — achieve stone-free outcomes in 85-97% of amenable stones and preserve the gland in over 90%. Recurrence rates after successful stone removal are 5-15% over 5 years and depend on hydration, smoking, medications, and presence of systemic risk factors such as hypercalcemia or gout. Submandibular gland excision is curative but removes the gland; long-term consequences include mild dry mouth on the side of surgery, generally well tolerated. Patient-rated quality-of-life scores improve substantially after gland-preserving treatment (Capaccio 2018). Diagnostic delay remains the main driver of poor outcome: prolonged obstruction leads to chronic fibrosis and the need for gland removal.
An ENT or oral and maxillofacial surgeon should evaluate any patient with recurrent gland swelling, palpable mass, or imaging-confirmed stone over 3-4 mm. Specialist input is essential to select between conservative therapy, sialendoscopy, ESWL, transoral removal, and gland excision.
Find specialists →Conservative management can clear small stones within 2-6 weeks. Sialendoscopy recovery: minor swelling 1-3 days; full normal eating within 1 week. Transoral sialolithotomy: 1-2 weeks of soft diet, full healing 2-4 weeks. Submandibular gland excision: 2-3 weeks off heavy work; small risk of marginal mandibular weakness improving over 3-6 months. ESWL: same-day return to activity, multiple sessions over weeks may be needed.
Regular exercise is encouraged, with attention to hydration during prolonged exertion in heat. Avoid contact sports without a mouthguard for 2-4 weeks after intraoral surgery. Resumed normal activity within 24-48 hours after most sialendoscopy procedures.
Choose an ENT or oral and maxillofacial surgeon with formal sialendoscopy training and a personal annual volume of at least 30 cases. High-volume sialendoscopy units consistently report gland-preservation rates above 90%. For very large or intraglandular stones, ESWL availability is an additional advantage.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 13, 2026
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