Diagnosing aphthous ulcers relies primarily on examining their appearance and location in the mouth, along with understanding a person’s medical history. While these painful sores are usually identified through a simple visual inspection, additional tests may be necessary when ulcers are severe, recurring frequently, or accompanied by other health concerns.
Introduction: When to Seek Diagnosis
Anyone experiencing painful sores inside their mouth may benefit from a diagnostic evaluation, especially if these sores return repeatedly or fail to heal within two weeks. People who develop aphthous ulcers, commonly known as canker sores, typically first notice these lesions during childhood or adolescence, though they can appear at any age. Around 20 to 25 percent of the general population experiences these ulcers at some point in their lives.[1][4]
It is particularly important to seek medical evaluation when mouth ulcers are unusually large, extremely painful, or persist beyond two weeks without showing signs of improvement. If you develop multiple ulcers at the same time or experience frequent episodes where new sores appear before old ones have healed, diagnostic assessment can help determine whether an underlying health condition might be contributing to the problem. This becomes especially crucial if the ulcers interfere significantly with eating, drinking, or speaking.[2][3]
People who use tobacco products or consume alcohol regularly should be particularly vigilant about mouth ulcers that do not heal, as these habits can increase the risk of more serious oral conditions. Additionally, if mouth ulcers appear alongside other symptoms such as fever, swollen lymph nodes, unusual fatigue, eye discomfort, genital ulcers, joint pain, or gastrointestinal problems like recurring diarrhea, a comprehensive diagnostic evaluation is warranted to investigate possible systemic diseases.[8][11]
Classic Diagnostic Methods
The diagnosis of aphthous ulcers is typically straightforward and relies primarily on clinical examination rather than complex testing procedures. Most healthcare providers, including doctors and dentists, can identify these ulcers through a careful visual inspection of the mouth during a routine examination. The distinctive appearance of aphthous ulcers makes them relatively easy to recognize for experienced clinicians.[1][18]
During the clinical examination, the healthcare provider looks for characteristic features that distinguish aphthous ulcers from other types of mouth sores. These ulcers typically appear as round or oval-shaped lesions with well-defined borders. The center of the ulcer usually has a white, yellow, or grayish appearance, while the surrounding tissue displays a red, inflamed border often described as an erythematous halo. The ulcers form on the softer, non-keratinized surfaces inside the mouth, such as the inner cheeks, lips, underside of the tongue, soft palate, or the floor of the mouth.[2][5]
Healthcare providers classify aphthous ulcers into three main types based on their size, number, and healing characteristics. Minor aphthous ulcers are the most common form, affecting approximately 80 percent of people who experience these sores. These ulcers measure less than 5 millimeters in diameter (about the size of a pencil eraser) and typically heal within one to two weeks without leaving scars. Major aphthous ulcers, which affect about 10 to 15 percent of cases, are larger than one centimeter in diameter, penetrate deeper into the tissue, cause more severe pain, and may take several weeks to months to heal, often leaving scars behind. Herpetiform ulcers are the least common type, occurring in 5 to 10 percent of cases, and appear as clusters of numerous tiny pinpoint ulcers that may merge together to form larger, irregularly shaped lesions.[4][15]
A thorough medical history is an essential component of the diagnostic process. The healthcare provider will ask detailed questions about when the ulcers first appeared, how frequently they recur, and how long each episode typically lasts. Understanding potential triggers is important, so questions about recent stress levels, dietary habits, oral hygiene products used (particularly toothpastes containing sodium lauryl sulfate), history of mouth injuries or dental work, and any family history of similar ulcers help establish patterns. Women may be asked about whether ulcers correlate with their menstrual cycle, as hormonal changes can sometimes trigger outbreaks.[3][5]
Distinguishing aphthous ulcers from other conditions that cause mouth sores is a critical part of the diagnostic process. Healthcare providers must differentiate these benign ulcers from viral infections like herpes simplex, hand-foot-and-mouth disease, or other infections. Unlike cold sores caused by herpes virus, aphthous ulcers occur only inside the mouth, never on the external lip surface, and are not contagious. Cold sores typically begin as fluid-filled blisters that break open, while aphthous ulcers appear as ulcers from the start. Additionally, conditions such as oral cancer, autoimmune diseases like Behçet syndrome or lupus, inflammatory bowel diseases including Crohn disease or ulcerative colitis, and various infections must be considered and ruled out.[8][11]
When the diagnosis is not immediately clear from visual examination and medical history alone, or when recurrent severe ulcers suggest an underlying systemic condition, additional diagnostic investigations may be ordered. Blood tests can help identify nutritional deficiencies or systemic diseases that might be contributing to recurrent ulceration. Common blood tests include complete blood count to check for anemia, measurements of vitamin B12 levels, folate (folic acid) levels, iron studies, and zinc levels, as deficiencies in these nutrients have been associated with recurrent aphthous ulcers.[1][7]
Additional blood tests may be performed to screen for systemic conditions. These might include antibody tests for celiac disease (a digestive disorder triggered by gluten), as people with celiac disease experience aphthous ulcers more frequently than the general population. A fecal calprotectin test may be recommended to screen for inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn disease, which can manifest with oral ulcers as one of several symptoms. In cases where autoimmune conditions are suspected, specific antibody tests may be ordered.[1][7]
When infections need to be ruled out, healthcare providers may collect swabs from the ulcerated areas to test for microorganisms. Laboratory analysis of these swabs can identify the presence of fungal infections like Candida albicans (thrush), herpes simplex virus, or bacterial infections including those caused by Vincent’s organisms. While these organisms are not the cause of true aphthous ulcers, testing helps ensure that what appears to be an aphthous ulcer is not actually caused by an infection requiring different treatment.[1]
In rare cases where ulcers are unusually large, persist despite treatment, or when there is concern about malignancy, a tissue biopsy may be performed. During a biopsy, a small sample of tissue from the ulcer and surrounding area is removed and sent to a laboratory for microscopic examination by a pathologist. Histological findings in aphthous ulcers typically show a mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltrate with a fibrin coating, but biopsy is primarily useful for ruling out other serious conditions rather than confirming aphthous ulceration.[8][9]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
While the available sources do not provide specific information about diagnostic criteria used exclusively for enrolling patients in clinical trials for aphthous ulcers, the standard diagnostic methods described above would form the foundation for patient selection in research studies. Clinical trials investigating treatments for recurrent aphthous stomatitis would likely require documentation of the ulcer type, frequency of recurrence, severity of symptoms, and confirmation that other conditions have been appropriately ruled out.
Researchers conducting clinical trials would need to establish clear inclusion and exclusion criteria based on clinical presentation, medical history, and potentially laboratory findings. Documentation of recurrence patterns, such as how many episodes occur within a specific time period (for example, three-month recurrence rates), would help ensure that enrolled participants truly have recurrent aphthous stomatitis rather than isolated incidents. Blood tests confirming normal nutritional status might be required to distinguish primary aphthous ulceration from ulcers secondary to correctable deficiencies.[4][7]
Visual documentation through clinical photography would likely be used in trials to objectively assess ulcer size, number, and healing progression over time. Standardized pain scales and quality-of-life questionnaires would provide measurable outcomes for comparing treatment effectiveness. Any clinical trial would also need to exclude participants with underlying systemic diseases that could confound results or require specialized screening to identify specific patient subgroups.


