Dunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet Resort

Dunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet ResortDunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet Resort     

 

  Open 7-Days a Week, 6:30am-8:00pm - Appointments 727-738-2273

Dunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet Resort, located in Dunedin Fl., is the only AAHA Accredited Animal Hospital in the Dunedin, Palm Harbor, Countryside, Ozona, and Safety Harbor area. What does it mean to you and your pet to be treated by Veterinarians at Dunedin Animal Medical Center an AAHA Accredited Veterinary Animal Hospital? AAHA Click Here...

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Dunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet Resort
 

Dog Dentistry - Why Does My Dog Need Dental X-rays ?


Buster's - Dentigerous Cyst, Infected Roots and a loose Tooth

Dr. Renee Boyajan, Buster's Veterinarian


Dunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet Resort - Buster - Dentigerous Cyst-1

Meet Buster...

  • He came to see us because of a loose tooth.
  • Just looking at him you would never suspect that he had other dental disease.  He had 6 broken teeth, two dentigerous cysts, two canine teeth with dentin exposure, painful infected tooth roots that were left after the crown fractured and a loose tooth.

Dunedin Animal Medical Center is AAHA Accredited...

Being an AAHA Accredited Veterinary Animal Hospital, our commitment is to only provide the best medical care for your pets and our patients. Complete Dental X-rays for every dental patient is an important part of that commitment because over 50% of dental disease will never be found without dental x-rays. Buster is an example where our patient commitment has made a pet's life much better.


Dental procedures begin with a complete oral exam and dental x-rays... 

  • Picture # 2, The blue arrow shows gum tissue where a tooth should be. The red arrow points to another area of gum tissue where a tooth is missing. Without radiographs, the area appears to be normal.
  • # 3 - Dental radiographs of the area in picture # 2, below. The blue arrows outline the tooth inside the cyst that never erupted above the gumline. The small red arrows outline the extent of the dentigerous cyst. The large red arrows show the area in picture # 2 where the tooth was missing. The radiographs reveal the roots of the tooth that was thought to be missing. These roots can be a source of infection and pain if not removed. These two problems would never have been found without dental X-rays.
Dunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet Resort - Buster - Dentigerous Cyst

Extraction of the tooth inside the dentigerous cyst...

  • In picture # 4, the blue arrow is now pointing to the dentigerous cyst cavity after we have created an opening. You can see the missing tooth inside the cyst.
  • Picture #5, the missing tooth now visible inside the cyst. This tooth was extracted to stop the cyst from continuing to expand and damage the jaw bone and affect the surrounding teeth. We also removed the lining of the cyst.

Dental x-rays insure that all tooth roots have been extracted...

  • # 6 is the post-extraction radiograph showing the tooth and retained roots have been extracted. The small red arrows show where the bone was removed to gain access to the cyst. The small blue arrow shows where the small tooth was extracted. The large red arrows show the tooth roots are no longer present.
  • Radiograph # 7 is the opposite side of Busters mouth and reveals the exact same problem existed here. The dentigerous cyst was treated, it’s tooth and cyst lining removed and the infected roots were extracted.
Dunedin Animal Medical Center & Pet Resort - Buster - Dentigerous Cyst -7

Without dental x-rays...

  • The loose tooth, that Buster was originally presented for, would have been extracted and Buster sent home with both dentigerous cysts and 4 infected and painful tooth roots.
  • Thanks to dental x-rays, knowledgeable veterinarians and concerned owners, Buster is now a healthier, happier and pain-free pup!

Dog Dentistry - Why Does My Dog Need Dental X-rays ?

Buster needed dental x-rays to...

  1. Discover that he had two (2) dentigerous cysts that, if left untreated, could have resulted in Buster's lower jaw fracturing. 
  2. Discover that Buster had 4 tooth roots that were infected and painful. Left undiscovered and untreated this could have resulted in a chronic infection causing organ damage, erosion of bone around the infected roots, loss of other teeth and chronic pain.
  3. Confirm that all tooth roots were completely removed when his dentergous cyst tooth, infected tooth roots and loose tooth were extracted.