Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Oral problems in cats with patellar fracture and dental anomaly
By Bell, Cynthia M et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary dentistry·2023·Specialty Oral Pathology for Animals, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Characterization of Oral Pathology in Cats Affected by Patellar Fracture and Dental Anomaly Syndrome (PADS).
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 13 domestic shorthair cats with a condition called patellar fracture and dental anomaly syndrome (PADS) were brought in due to jaw swelling and dental issues. Most of these cats had persistent baby teeth and impacted adult teeth, leading to painful infections in their jaws. The study found that aggressive surgical treatment, including the removal of problematic teeth, was necessary to help these cats recover. After surgery, the cats showed improvement, highlighting the importance of early intervention for better outcomes.
People also search for: cat jaw swelling treatment · dental problems in cats · cat tooth extraction recovery · PADS in cats · osteomyelitis in cats
Abstract
Patellar fracture and dental anomaly syndrome (PADS) is a congenital bone disease of cats that is characterized by atraumatic bone fractures (most commonly the patella), the persistence of deciduous teeth, and impaction of permanent teeth. Jaw swelling due to osteomyelitis is often the reason that cats with PADS are presented for veterinary dental care. The clinical history, oral examination findings, dental radiological findings, and histopathology were evaluated for 13 cats with dental and skeletal pathology consistent with PADS, including 9 with osteomyelitis. Cats in this study were predominantly domestic shorthair (12 of 13 cats), and there was no apparent sex predilection. All cats had multiple persistent deciduous teeth and multiple impacted permanent teeth, although the number of persistent and impacted teeth varied. Osteomyelitis of the jaw typically occurred within the first 4 years of life. Osteomyelitis of the mandible was 4 times more common than osteomyelitis of the maxilla. Histologically, osteomyelitis was chronic, neutrophilic, and osteoproliferative. Necrotic bone was confirmed in 67% of osteomyelitis lesions. Histological evaluation of jaws without inflammation demonstrated abnormal amounts of unmodeled bone, abnormally dense bone, and retention of cartilage in the caudal mandible. Three cats in the study had mandibular distoclusion and 2 had concurrent paronychia. To obtain a favorable clinical outcome in PADS cats with jaw swelling, prompt and aggressive surgical treatment of osteomyelitis is required. Extraction of persistent deciduous teeth and impacted permanent teeth is recommended when there is associated periodontitis or osteomyelitis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37248965/