Sentences with phrase «of gingivostomatitis»

The salient clinical signs of gingivostomatitis include apparently extreme oral pain; swollen, ulcerated, and bleeding gums; lack of appetite or — if an affected cat seems eager to eat — the inability to do so; consequent weight loss; excessive salivation; blood in the saliva; bad breath; and pawing at the mouth.

Not exact matches

Drs. Boaz Arzi and Frank Verstraete of the Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service, along with researcher Dr. Dori Borjesson, continue to have success with a novel stem cell approach to treating feline chronic gingivostomatitis (FCGS).
For challenging extraction cases, multiple of full mouth extraction cases in patients with tooth fractures, or severe periodontal disease, and in cats with gingivostomatitis.
Cats are affected by many of the same dental problems that affect dogs (periodontal disease, fractured teeth, and oral masses) in addition to special syndromes (tooth resorption, gingivostomatitis).
He is a principle investigator on the use of adipose - derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) for feline gingivostomatitis and also a co-principle investigator on the use of rhBMP - 2 for mandibular reconstruction.
Oral manifestations of systemic disease, gingivostomatitis, feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions and oral autoimmune disorders.
• Dangers of Mushroom Toxicity • Fractured Teeth • Feeding Fido: What You Need to Know to Keep Your Pet Fit & Healthy • Feline Gingivostomatitis • Gingivitis and Periodontitis • Greening Your Veterinary Practice • How to Survive Your Pet's Therapeutic Confinement • Wilderness First Aid
I also seek to provide access for veterinary surgeons to information which is not readily available elsewhere: on the subjects of feline blood groups, feline chronic gingivostomatitis and with a directory of genetic and inherited diseases which have been reported in cats so that vets can check for any breed predispositions when presented with an unusual case.
As a staged procedure, laser ablation surgery is also helpful in the long term treatment of refractory cases of feline chronic gingivostomatitis.
Gingivostomatitis is a debilitating feline dental disease marked by severe and chronic inflammation of a cat's gingiva (gums) and mucosa, the moist tissue that lines its oral cavity.
Although a biopsy of oral cavity tissue may be required for a conclusive diagnosis, she notes, «you can determine that it's gingivostomatitis in about 85 percent of cases just by looking into a cat's mouth.»
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