Consequences of crown shortening canine teeth in Greenland sled dogs

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the consequences of crown shortening, focusing on the prevalence of pulp exposure and periapical pathology in Greenland sled dogs that had had their canine crowns shortened at an early age. METHODS Five cadaver heads and 54 sled dogs underwent an oral examination for dental fr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Small Animal Practice
Main Authors: Kortegaard, H. E., Anthony Knudsen, T., Dahl, S., Agger, J. F. G., Eriksen, T.
Other Authors: Aase og Joergen Münters fond, Bernhard Bangs Mindefond, Dansk Kennel Klub
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2015
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jsap.12314
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2Fjsap.12314
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/jsap.12314
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Summary:OBJECTIVES To evaluate the consequences of crown shortening, focusing on the prevalence of pulp exposure and periapical pathology in Greenland sled dogs that had had their canine crowns shortened at an early age. METHODS Five cadaver heads and 54 sled dogs underwent an oral examination for dental fractures and pulp exposure of canines. All canines were radiographed and evaluated for periapical pathology. RESULTS The prevalence of canine pulp exposure in 12 (5 heads and 7 dogs) crown shortened dogs was 91 · 7%, and 21 · 3% in 47 not‐crown shortened dogs. A significant (P < 0 · 001) risk of pulp exposure of the canines in the crown shortened group compared to the not‐crown shortened group was seen with a relative risk of 4 · 3 on a dog basis and a relative risk of 12 · 2 on a tooth basis. In dogs with pulp exposure of canines (n = 51) the prevalence of periapical pathology was 82 · 4%, but only 0 · 8% in dogs without pulp exposure (n = 133) resulting in a significant (relative risk, 109 · 5; P < 0 · 001) risk of periapical pathology in teeth with pulp exposure compared to teeth without pulp exposure. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE The high risk of periapical pathology observed in teeth with pulp exposure confirms that these teeth should not be neglected in affected dogs.