Kathy and Kitty
Very Active Member
I'm cross-posting from the Lantus Board, hoping someone here may know more.
Kitty had a dental today to follow up on a "lytic" moth-eaten area of his jaw. For the moment, Kitty is okay. I'll be able to pick him up in a couple of hours.
The vet asked me to come to the office to look at x-rays taken during the dental cleaning.
The remaining three front teeth (a broken canine was removed last year), plus a few other teeth on both sides, have root resorption in various stages. The vet says that this is not uncommon. He felt it would not be right to pull these teeth at this time, because the roots are not available to pull.
There are areas where the gum has...receded? Been damaged? I'm not sure. But it's the roots that are the real problem.
This is what accounts for the "lytic," moth-eaten appearance that was originally picked up by the radiologist last fall.
The plan is to send these x-rays to a board-certified dental vet. We'll get another opinion on how to proceed. I have NO idea what to expect.
The vet doesn't think Kitty is in pain from this. But my heart tells me otherwise. For many, many months, it seems Kitty just moves around trying to find a place to be comfortable.
Anyone with experience with this, please chime in.
Kitty had a dental today to follow up on a "lytic" moth-eaten area of his jaw. For the moment, Kitty is okay. I'll be able to pick him up in a couple of hours.
The vet asked me to come to the office to look at x-rays taken during the dental cleaning.
The remaining three front teeth (a broken canine was removed last year), plus a few other teeth on both sides, have root resorption in various stages. The vet says that this is not uncommon. He felt it would not be right to pull these teeth at this time, because the roots are not available to pull.
There are areas where the gum has...receded? Been damaged? I'm not sure. But it's the roots that are the real problem.
This is what accounts for the "lytic," moth-eaten appearance that was originally picked up by the radiologist last fall.
The plan is to send these x-rays to a board-certified dental vet. We'll get another opinion on how to proceed. I have NO idea what to expect.
The vet doesn't think Kitty is in pain from this. But my heart tells me otherwise. For many, many months, it seems Kitty just moves around trying to find a place to be comfortable.
Anyone with experience with this, please chime in.