Formerly the Animal Dental Center of Milwaukee/Oshkosh

No Description resized to 300 pixels wide
Click this photo to visit Cat (feline) Dental Care

No Description resized to 300 pixels wide
Click this photo to visit Dog (canine) Dental Care



Click this photo to visit Rodent/Rabbit Dental Care

resized to 300 pixels wide
News!


No Description resized to 300 pixels wide 

Please view our brochure with one of the links below:
 
AVDC_Brochure.pdf
or  AVDC Brochure.doc



Member of the American Veterinary Dental College (AVDC)

Member of the International Academy of Veterinary Dentistry (AVD)

No Description resized to 300 pixels wide

Member of the American Veterinary Dental Society(AVDS)

Member of the Minnesota Veterinary Medical Association (MnVMA)


Member of the Wisconsin Veterinary Medical Association

(WVMA since 1983) 
Dr. Kressin is an elected member of WVMA Executive Board

No Description resized to 300 pixels wide


Member of the Milwaukee Veterinary Medical Association

Member of the Northeast Wisconsin Veterinary Medical Association

Member of NEWVMA board as the District 3 WVMA representative

 

 

Facebook

 


 
Animal Dentistry & Oral Surgery Specialists
LLC

      Caring:  Cat dentist-Dog dentist Vet dental and oral surgery services

    Dale Kressin DVM, FAVD, Dipl AVDC        Steve Honzelka DVM, Resident   

    Oshkosh-Green Bay-Milwaukee-Waukesha-Minneapolis & Metropolitan areas

                                                      920 233-8409   888 598-6684      

 

Chinchilla dental care

Chinchillas have an elodent dentition which consists of aradicular hypsodont incisor and cheek teeth.  The incisor and the cheek teeth (premolars and molars) grow and erupt continuously.  This dynamic change of occlusion leads to potential for the development of malocclusions of the incisors or the cheek teeth.  Tooth crown and eventual apical elongation can result in devestating and painful consequences.  The diet is tremendously important in creating a "balance" between tooth growth and dental abrasion.

Chinchillas are rodents.  Rodents are fundamentally different when compared to rabbits as they have one pair of upper incisor teeth.  Additionally, rodents posess other differences in dental and oral anatomy.

Dental Anatomy

The lower incisors of the chinchilla have a broad curvature and extend toward the middile of the cheek teeth.
The upper incisors have greater curvature than the lower incisors and extend nearly to the upper cheek teeth.



Notice that the chinchilla's lower incisor extends toward the middle  of the cheek teeth.

The chinchilla cheek teeth have a level occlusal plane that can be easily evaluated using a straight lateral skull survey radiograph.



The occlusal plane is near level in this
chinchilla.

Anisognathic jaw relationship

The width of the upper and lower jaws are unequal or anisognathic in the chinchillas.  The mandibular cheek teeth are wider apart compared to the upper cheek teeth.  This relationship is opposite of the rabbit; where the teeth are arranged in parralel rows with the mandibular cheek teeth closer together compared to the upper cheek teeth.

Diagnostic imaging for Chinchillas

Survey skull radiographs are particularly useful when evaluating the chinchilla.  Straight lateral views are useful to evaluate for the incisor and cheek teeth occlusion.  Cheek teeth coronal and apical elongation can be assessed.

Intraoral and extraoral dental radiographs provide excellent detail of the incisors and cheek teeth.

Computed tomography (CT scan) can be especially useful for bone and teeth assesments.  Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be helpful for the evaluation of soft tissue structures of the head.