Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Extra cheek teeth in horses - signs, treatment, and outcomes
By Quinn, G C et al.·Published in Equine veterinary journal·2005·Department of Veterinary Clinical Science, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Supernumerary cheek teeth (n = 24): clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and outcome in 15 horses.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A group of 15 horses was examined for extra cheek teeth, known as supernumerary cheek teeth (SCT), which can cause dental problems. Most horses showed improvement after conservative treatments, like managing overgrowths, while those with more severe issues needed the problematic teeth removed. Unfortunately, four horses were euthanized shortly after diagnosis due to poor health or lack of response to treatment. Overall, many horses with SCT can be treated successfully, but severe cases may require extraction for relief.
People also search for: horse dental problems · supernumerary cheek teeth treatment · horse tooth extraction recovery · signs of dental disease in horses
Abstract
REASONS FOR PERFORMING STUDY: There are few reports of case series of horses with supernumerary cheek teeth (SCT) that document clinical findings, treatment and long-term outcome. OBJECTIVES: To review the clinical and ancillary diagnostic findings and responses to different treatments in horses with SCT. METHODS: The case records of 15 horses were reviewed and long-term outcomes obtained by telephone interview. RESULTS: Fifteen horses with a total of 24 SCT were identified. Two SCT were incidental findings and were not treated. Clinical signs were improved or resolved in 11 of 13 of the teeth treated conservatively and all 6 treated by extraction had a favourable outcome. Four horses were subjected to euthanasia within a short period of diagnosis, either due to a poor prognosis at the outset or failure to respond to initial conservative treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Some SCT are chance findings and do not cause clinical signs. In those instances where clinical signs of dental disease are mild, conservative treatment including the management of diastema and reduction of overgrowths is often effective. Horses with severe clinical signs attributable to an SCT are likely to require extraction of the offending tooth. POTENTIAL RELEVANCE: An SCT is an uncommon dental anomaly but should be considered in the differential diagnosis of cases with signs of severe dental disease. The preferred management for SCT is very variable and determined by the severity of the associated changes, but ranges from conservative measures through forceps extraction per os to major facial flap surgery.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16295926/