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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Breed risks for tooth loss from tooth resorption in cats

By Vapalahti, K et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2024·Department of Veterinary Biosciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A large case-control study indicates a breed-specific predisposition to feline tooth resorption.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A study found that tooth resorption (TR), a painful dental disease in cats that can lead to tooth loss, is more common in certain breeds. Specifically, Cornish Rex, European, and Ragdoll cats are at a higher risk, while Exotic-Persians are less likely to develop this condition. The risk of TR also increases with age and is linked to other dental issues like gingivitis. Interestingly, female cats that have constant access to food seem to have a lower risk of TR compared to those fed at specific times. Regular dental check-ups are important for early detection and management of this condition.

People also search for: cat tooth resorption symptoms · Ragdoll dental disease · how to prevent tooth loss in cats

Abstract

Tooth resorption (TR) is one of the most common dental diseases of cats. It is a painful condition leading to tooth loss. The etiology of TR remains unclear, but old age, breed, other oral and dental diseases, and environmental factors are suspected predisposing factors. In our study, we used part of the data from the extensive feline health online survey of 8115 Finnish cats. As TR is difficult to detect and as the feline health survey included diagnoses defined by both veterinarians and the owners, we limited our study to a subpopulation of cats diagnosed with oral or dental disease by a veterinarian and had dental examination or surgery under sedation (n=944). We utilized case-control study analysed by multivariable logistic regression to determine the risk factors and breed variation of feline TR. The 202 cats diagnosed with TR were defined as TR cases and the remaining 742 cats as controls. The frequency of veterinarian-diagnosed TR was 3.9% in the health survey data (316/8115) and 21% in the subpopulation (202/944). The risk of TR increased with age (14.7% in youngest and 25.3% in oldest age group). Our finding that TR was significantly associated with gingivitis or periodontitis in cats that had also calculus (OR: 2.49 and 3.70, respectively) suggests that inflammatory changes caused by calculus increase the risk of TR. We found that Cornish Rex, European, and Ragdoll are at higher risk for TR (OR: 2.44, 2.98 and 2.90, respectively). Exotic-Persians breed group had lower risk (OR: 0.28). TR was not observed in Turkish van or Devon Rex. The differences between breeds highlight a genetic contribution. In addition, female cats that had food available constantly had significantly less TR than female cats that had feeding times (OR: 0.44). The underlying reasons for this remain unexplained in our study.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38740176/