Poryphomonas Periodontal Vaccine Discontinued

Periodontal Vaccine Discontinued

Pfizer Animal Health announced it has discontinued manufacturing and distributing the Poryphomonas Periodontal “Perio” Vaccine.

They were distributing under a provisional license from the government, pending tests that proved the vaccine would prevent gingival redness and periodontal pocket formation.  The vaccine did not perform better than controls for those parameters.  This means, even though the bacteria were gone, the vaccine could not be proven to help with gingivitis in the specific ways Pfizer was trying to prove.

We recommend all-natural Perio-Powder or Water additive to enhance daily tooth brushing, or as a help for pets who will not allow tooth brushing.

Call for a dental evaluation today! 877 DR TRULI

Periodontal Disease Pet Parent Advice

To help you understand Periodontal Disease and Your pet

By: Dr. Sandra Springer, VMD, May, 2011 aka Doc Truli

Based on a Dental Evaluation, Your Pet May Be Diagnosed With:

□ Periodontal Disease Grade 1

□ Perio Grade 2-3

□ Perio Grade 4

What are the benefits of treating Periodontal Disease for me and my pet?

• Treat pain.

• Cure infection.

• Decrease inflammation that feeds arthritis and ear pain and eye pain and other painful chronic conditions in the body.

• Prevent mouth bacteria from seeding on the skin and causing recurrent skin infections.

• Improve digestive efficiency.

• Decrease future pain and costs.

• Add 2-4 years to your pet’s expected lifespan.

• Sweeter kisses! Continue reading “Periodontal Disease Pet Parent Advice”

New Therapy to Save Teeth Without Surgery

“Dentists treat periodontal pockets all the time. In a human, the pocket might be a few millimeters deep… a dog could have a pocket that is 1/4-1/2 an inch, maybe 5 times the size of a human’s problem!”

Periodontal Filler Clindoral packaging
Clindoral Treats Periodontal Stage 2-3/4 Teeth

Clindoral Saves Teeth

The Problem With Pet Dentistry

Here’s the problem: your dog or cat or ferret has terrible breath.  You can see yellow-brown calculus clinging to the teeth.  You might even see bright red sore gum lines above the yellow tartar.  You feel guilty that you waited so long to take care of the problem.  You do not want your pet to loose any teeth.  You are not a fan of anesthesia.  Not for yourself, not for your children, not for your pet.

Did I get that all right?  Pretty close?  Yeah, I’m good like that.

So, up until now, your vet has put your pet under anesthesia, cleaned the teeth, and maybe pulled teeth that were hopelessly damaged.  That’s fairly standard.  News flash: There is no way around the anesthesia requirement for proper, effective tooth care in pets. Continue reading “New Therapy to Save Teeth Without Surgery”

10-Year Old German Shepherd Dog Needs 9 Teeth Removed

The tartar is so thick and crusted and caked onto the tooth surfaces that it looks like one big continuous shiny brown glop of muddy cement dentures.

nine tartar and calculus encrusted teeth extracted from a suffering german shepherd dog's mouth lined up on a gauze pad
The Dirty Nine

This Shepherd’s Sewer Mouth Made Professional Nurses Faint!

Abigail’s mouth smelled like a toilet from across the examination room.  The 10-year-old German Shepherd Dog looked normal.  She acted normal.  She even walked normally.  But, if she licked your hand in greeting, you could not get that smell off your hand for 48 hours, no matter how many times you washed!

Abigail suffered horrible, horrible dental disease.  This dog had one of the top ten worst mouths Doc Truli and the nurses had ever seen.  Luckily, Abigail’s mom suspected there was a problem and came ready for dental surgery.

“I know her mouth is bad…” said mom.

(That’s worlds better than the usual shocked response Doc gets from pet parents, “How can it be that bad, he’s eating just fine.”)

Veterinary Technician Student Blown Away by Tartar

Doc Truli hosts clinical technician students from the local veterinary technician college.  “Wow!  My teacher would love to have those teeth so we can use them in class!” said the Thursday student.

“For what?” asked Doc.

“Our teacher mounts the teeth in a fake plastic dog jaw and we clean the teeth in the dental lab for practice,” said the student.

“Okay, well, I’ll ask Abigail’s mom if she wants to donate the teeth for teaching purposes after we get this mouth cleaned up,” promised Doc Truli. Continue reading “10-Year Old German Shepherd Dog Needs 9 Teeth Removed”

3-Year-Old Maltese Baby Teeth Infected

She drank a cupful of water when she got home after anesthesia, but mom and dad did not give her more water for 30 minutes, to let stomach settle. If Sweetie ate or drank too much right when she got home, she might start vomiting and not stop for hours!

This Maltese Baby Avoided Major Infection

Sweetie, a 3-year-old happy Maltese wiggled her tail and smiled at Doc Truli.

“She’ll need the tartar removed from her molars,” said the Doc.

“Okay,” said Sweetie’s folks.  “We know keeping the teeth healthy will add years to her life.  At three, it’s about time we had her teeth cleaned.”

“Just so you know, we always take full-mouth dental x-rays with every dental cleaning,” said Doc Truli.

“Oh, good!  But why?  She’s so young, why does she need that?”

“You’d be surprised…” said the Doc. Continue reading “3-Year-Old Maltese Baby Teeth Infected”

3-Year-Old Maltese Baby Teeth Infected

She drank a cupful of water when she got home after anesthesia, but mom and dad did not give her more water for 30 minutes, to let stomach settle. If Sweetie ate or drank too much right when she got home, she might start vomiting and not stop for hours!

This Maltese Baby Avoided Major Infection

Sweetie, a 3-year-old happy Maltese wiggled her tail and smiled at Doc Truli.

“She’ll need the tartar removed from her molars,” said the Doc.

“Okay,” said Sweetie’s folks.  “We know keeping the teeth healthy will add years to her life.  At three, it’s about time we had her teeth cleaned.”

“Just so you know, we always take full-mouth dental x-rays with every dental cleaning,” said Doc Truli.

“Oh, good!  But why?  She’s so young, why does she need that?”

“You’d be surprised…” said the Doc. Continue reading “3-Year-Old Maltese Baby Teeth Infected”

9-Year-Old Chihuahua Needs 9 Teeth Removed

*!*# If your dog suddenly stops eating hard food or hard crunchy treats, get the teeth checked by a veterinarian who enjoys and understands working with teeth!!!!

It Starts as a Tiny Lump

“Doctor, I’m worried about this lump on Tiny.  It’s been there for a coupla years, but it’s been bothering me, and I wanted to get it checked out,” said Tiny’s mom.

A black, long-haired 9-year-old Chihuahua stood looking up and smiling at Doc Truli.  Her tail wagged faster than a puppy Boston Terrier’s tail!

“Has the lump gotten bigger, smaller, or stayed the same?” asked Doc Truli.

Tru Tip:

“Doctors want to know if a lump has gotten bigger, smaller, or stayed the same since you first noticed it.  Getting bigger might be a bad sign.  Getting smaller could mean the lump is inflammation, not cancer.  Staying the same makes the doctor wonder what made you feel the urge to make the appointment.  A good doctor will ask more questions to find out what put you over the uncomfortable edge and made you schlep your dog or cat to the vet that particular day,” says Doc Truli.

“It’s exactly the same.  I just figured, since we’re here because I got that reminder card, I’d mention it,” said Tiny’s mom.

“Well, the lump is about 4 mm, round, and fully under the skin.  There’s a chance it’s benign.  We should schedule surgery and have it removed and tested,” said the Doc. Continue reading “9-Year-Old Chihuahua Needs 9 Teeth Removed”

JRT vs SUV

Yes, the little charger fully implemented his plan to forbid the two-ton family vehicle from pursuing a course out of the driveway! How did Henry carry out his scheme?

Ever meet a calm, quiet, reasonable Jack Russell Terrier (err, Parson’s Russell Terrier?) Okay, I have, too.  Once in a blue moon.  But usually, the JRT’s are like Henry, the 3-year-old male intact sport-utility-vehicle-stoppin’ JRT in my emergency room.

Henry ran around his mom’s legs and knotted his leash around the waiting room chair legs at 5 pm on a busy Saturday afternoon.  The problem?

“Let’s see that tooth,” said Doc Truli.

“Grrrr,” said Henry.  Then his little stump Jack Russell Tail said, “Wag, wag, wag.”

(Now Doc knew Henry was all show and no go.)

“Open up, Henry,” said the Doc as she placed her thumb into the side of the Jack’s dental arcade behind the canine tooth and before the big carnassial molar in the back.  Henry’s mouth popped open.  “There’s the problem!  And it’s not nearly as bad as we thought,” said the Doc.

So here’s what happened:

Henry’s mom went into her garage to pull the SUV out into the driveway before loading the family for a drive.  Henry took great offense at the SUV rolling out of his garage, busted between some hapless child’s legs at the kitchen to garage passage door, and shot out into the driveway to stop the SUV.

Yes, the little charger fully implemented his plan to forbid the two-ton family vehicle from pursuing a course out of the driveway!  How did Henry carry out his scheme?  By biting and holding the right front truck tire, of course!  (Why didn’t my dog think of that?  Oh! Because he weighs 10 pounds (5 g) and the car weighs 2 tons!)  Henry succeeded in stopping the vehicle because the kids started screaming, “Stop, stop, stop!”

There was Henry, about 1 1/2 feet up in the air, his canine tooth stuck in the black rubber of the truck tire.  So, in a sense, he did stop the SUV.  The tooth disengaged and Henry slumped to the tarmac, stunned for 10 seconds, just  long enough for the kids to bundle him into the SUV for his journey to the doggie ER.

“Well, considering what he attempted to do, he suffered minimal damage.  His upper canine tooth is crooked, but it will heal almost in a normal position.  I can;t wiggle it, so he has a chance of a normal recovery,” said Doc Truli.

Henry took his painkillers for 2 days, then he ignored all attempts to feed him the non-steroid anti-infammatory medication and went back to his sentry duties without the doctor’s permission to return to work.

Please remember, any time your dog pulls a trick like this, you must prevent it from happening again!  Amazingly, dogs seem not to learn from these “mistakes.”  I suspect the dogs do not consider them mistakes at all, but rather, “missions accomplished!”

Help! My Dog's Mouth Smells Bad!

The minute a baby tooth and a permanent tooth share the same space, when the permanent tooth just starts budding through the gingiva, the baby tooth is retained, by definition.

Why Does my Puppy’s Breath Smell so Bad?

Romeo was a 10-month-old Brindle Chihuahua with halitosis (hal -i -toe- sis). That’s doctor-speak for bad breath.

“Doctor, why does my 10-month-old Chihuahua have such bad breath?” said Romeo’s dad.

One look under his lip revealed the answer.

A double upper canine tooth crowds the permanent tooth and fur and food stick in the crevice between the two teeth
The arrow points to a retained deciduous canine tooth with golden, shaggy muck stuck to it.

Romeo’s maxillary deciduous canine tooth is retained,” thought Doc Truli.

“Romeo’s left upper baby canine tooth didn’t fall out on time,” said Doc Truli.

Romeo had two other retained canine teeth and a retained upper incisor front tooth as well.

“Romeo needs surgery right away to remove the abnormal tooth before it causes further damage and infection in the mouth,” said Doc Truli. Continue reading “Help! My Dog's Mouth Smells Bad!”

Top Five Ways Dogs Fracture Their Teeth

Maybe You Didn’t Know: Ice Cubes Fracture Dogs’ Teeth! Plus other Tips…

8-Year-Old German Shepherd Fractures Critical Tooth

Mia is an 8-year-old female spayed German Shepherd Dog. Mia is gentle and sweet and kind. She leaves her food for the other dogs, and backs away to share her toys with friends’ dogs who come over to play. She has soft, wavy chestnut-brown and honey tan fur and soft brown eyes, with long curved black eyelashes.

Mia also chews like a demon dog from you-know-where!

“Doc, how do Mia’s teeth look?” asked her mom.

“They would be perfect, except for the broken carnassial (pronounced car-na-see-ul) tooth,” said Doc Truli.

“I don’t know what you just said, but I don’t like the sound of that,” said Mia’s mom. Continue reading “Top Five Ways Dogs Fracture Their Teeth”