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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Feline orofacial pain syndrome causing mouth pain and tongue injury

By Rusbridge, Clare et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2010·Stone Lion Veterinary Centre, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Feline orofacial pain syndrome (FOPS): a retrospective study of 113 cases.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 113 cats, mostly Burmese, showed signs of severe oral discomfort and even tongue mutilation due to a condition called feline orofacial pain syndrome (FOPS). This painful disorder often causes episodes of discomfort that can be triggered by movements of the mouth, and it may become more severe over time. Many affected cats had a history of oral lesions, and some experienced their first symptoms during the eruption of permanent teeth. Traditional pain medications often didn’t help, but some cats found relief with anti-convulsants that also have pain-relieving properties. Unfortunately, 12% of the cats in this study were euthanized due to the severity of their condition.

People also search for: cat mouth pain treatment · Burmese cat oral discomfort · feline orofacial pain syndrome symptoms · cat anxiety and pain · anti-convulsants for cat pain

Abstract

Feline orofacial pain syndrome (FOPS) is a pain disorder of cats with behavioural signs of oral discomfort and tongue mutilation. This report describes the findings from a case series of 113 cats including 100 Burmese. FOPS is suspected to be a neuropathic pain disorder and the predominance within the Burmese cat breed suggests an inherited disorder, possibly involving central and/or ganglion processing of sensory trigeminal information. The disease is characterised by an episodic, typically unilateral, discomfort with pain-free intervals. The discomfort is triggered, in many cases, by mouth movements. The disease is often recurrent and with time may become unremitting - 12% of cases in this series were euthanased as a consequence of the condition. Sensitisation of trigeminal nerve endings as a consequence of oral disease or tooth eruption appears to be an important factor in the aetiology - 63% of cases had a history of oral lesions and at least 16% experienced their first sign of discomfort during eruption of permanent teeth. External factors can also influence the disease as FOPS events could be directly linked to a situation causing anxiety in 20% of cats. FOPS can be resistant to traditional analgesics and in some cases successful management required anti-convulsants with an analgesic effect.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20451434/