Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Oral-fluid test finds hidden active gum disease in dogs
By Queck, Katherine E et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2018·From the Carolinas Animal Hospital and Dental Clinic P.A.·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Oral-Fluid Thiol-Detection Test Identifies Underlying Active Periodontal Disease Not Detected by the Visual Awake Examination.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that a new oral-fluid test can detect active periodontal disease in dogs that might be missed during a regular visual examination. In this research, 114 dogs underwent both a visual check and the thiol-detection test before a more thorough examination under anesthesia. The results showed that the thiol test was better at identifying early signs of gum disease, which is crucial because untreated gingivitis can lead to serious bone loss in the jaw. This test could help vets catch dental issues sooner and encourage better dental care for dogs.
People also search for: dog dental disease symptoms · how to prevent gum disease in dogs · thiol test for dog dental health
Abstract
Periodontal disease in dogs is highly prevalent but can only be accurately diagnosed by performing an anesthetized oral examination with periodontal probing and dental radiography. In this study, 114 dogs had a visual awake examination of the oral cavity and were administered an oral-fluid thiol-detection test prior to undergoing a a full-mouth anesthetized oral examination and digital dental radiographs. The results show the visual awake examination underestimated the presence and severity of active periodontal disease. The thiol-detection test was superior to the visual awake examination at detecting the presence and severity of active periodontal disease and was an indicator of progression toward alveolar bone loss. The thiol-detection test detected active periodontal disease at early stages of development, before any visual cues were present, indicating the need for intervention to prevent periodontal bone loss. Early detection is important because without intervention, dogs with gingivitis (active periodontal disease) progress to irreversible periodontal bone loss (stage 2+). As suggested in the current AAHA guidelines, a thiol-detection test administered in conjunction with the visual awake examination during routine wellness examinations facilitates veterinarian-client communication and mitigates under-diagnosis of periodontal disease and underutilization of dental services. The thiol-detection test can be used to monitor the periodontal health status of the conscious patient during follow-up examinations based on disease severity.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29558213/