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Anesthesia-free dental cleaning ?

Question:

I am looking for information about anesthesia-free dental cleaning for my relatively hyper 11-year-old dog. How effective is it compared to dental cleaning using anesthesia?


Answer: I've been cleaning my dogs' teeth for 13 years now. They are used to it, lay quietly, and it takes only about 5 or 10 minutes once or twice a month. I do it when I notice plaque or bad breath.

Just get a scraper from your vet (better) or FosterSmith (not the greatest but still usable)

As often as you think about it, swab his teeth with chlorohexidine on a Q-tip. Doing it after every meal is probably overkill but then you'd probably never have to scrape.

If plaque develops, lay him on his side and scrape away. It comes off like paint chips. Scrape along the gum line, not towards it where you could push something under the gums. For the bottom teeth I put a bone in his mouth to keep his mouth open to uncover the back molars.

You MUST project to the dog that "you're not going anywhere until I finish, and the quieter you lay there, the faster it'll be done" In other words, I guess I'm saying that I recommend this only to firm owners. If you let your dog negotiate everything, he'll never sit still and you'll probably injure his gums. (I let my dogs negotiate sometimes, but they can tell when it's time they have to listen too.)

If you aren't the type to do the scraping, just swab everyday and the teeth should stay clean without the scraping.

My vet recently started offering anesthesia-free dental cleaning and it seems to be intended for basic (uncomplicated) teeth-cleaning only. Although my 13 yr. old chihauhau is known to be snappy and has to have a muzzle on when the vet even clips his nails, the visiting dentist said he would have had no trouble cleaning his teeth. Turns out he couldn't because Scraps had a gum infection and needed two teeth pulled so I had to reschedule him for the anesthesia type. The vet charged nothing for that first attempt and the office was full of patients who were returning patients and all were quite happy with the service (which ran about $130. vs. $180. for anesthesia dental).

I'd say it's a great way of maintaining good dental health by doing it once a year and that way preventing complications by neglect.

I too was worried because my dog is hard to deal with for vets but seems he wasn't alone and whatever the dentist does he seems to have little trouble handling even nasty pets.

you certainly make cleaning your dogs teeth sound easy. I however can't even clip my own dogs NAILS and so anesthesia-free dental cleaning is a 'good' thing in MY case.








 
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