Feline Odontoclastic Resorptive Lesions (FORL) is a painful disease that affects feline teeth and that is increasing in prevalence. The ethiology is still rather unknown. However, research on the ultra structure of the feline tooth may help us understand why FORL is so prevalent in cats and not in other species. Since the ethiology is still unknown, there is yet no profylaxis. The pathogenesis is rather well known; the hard structure of affected teeth gradually undergo odontoclastic resorption and resorptive lesions are often partly replaced with bone- or cementum-like tissue. FORL is classified into five stages where the tooth crown, in the last stage, is fractured off. Different therapies have been tried and used with more or less success...
Tooth resorption is among the most common and most challenging problems in feline dentistry It is a ...
Feline tooth resorption (TR) is a common and painful disease characterised by loss of mineralised t...
Tooth resorption (TR; progressive destruction of hard dental tissues) varies in prevalence according...
Feline Odontoclastic Resorptive Lesions (FORL) is a painful disease that affects feline teeth and th...
Objective: Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL) are common in domestic cats. The disease i...
External feline osteoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL) of the tooth occur in 20-75% of domestic cats...
Dental resorptive lesions are the most commonly diagnosed dental disease in domestic felines, and pr...
Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL) were first recognized and histologically differentiat...
Dissertação de Mestrado Integrado em Medicina VeterináriaAs lesões de reabsorção odontoclástica feli...
U ovom radu se uspoređivala odontoklastičnu resorptivnu leziju kod mačaka sa humanim karijesom, kao...
The etiology of feline dental resorptive lesions is unknown, but some evidence suggests that interac...
SUMMARY The present article is a literature review of Feline Tooth Resorption (TR). Today TR is the ...
Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL), previously known as 'neck lesions,' are commonly kno...
Feline dental resorptive lesions affect more than one third of all adult domestic cats and continue ...
Introduction. Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesion (FORL) is one of the most common and painful or...
Tooth resorption is among the most common and most challenging problems in feline dentistry It is a ...
Feline tooth resorption (TR) is a common and painful disease characterised by loss of mineralised t...
Tooth resorption (TR; progressive destruction of hard dental tissues) varies in prevalence according...
Feline Odontoclastic Resorptive Lesions (FORL) is a painful disease that affects feline teeth and th...
Objective: Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL) are common in domestic cats. The disease i...
External feline osteoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL) of the tooth occur in 20-75% of domestic cats...
Dental resorptive lesions are the most commonly diagnosed dental disease in domestic felines, and pr...
Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL) were first recognized and histologically differentiat...
Dissertação de Mestrado Integrado em Medicina VeterináriaAs lesões de reabsorção odontoclástica feli...
U ovom radu se uspoređivala odontoklastičnu resorptivnu leziju kod mačaka sa humanim karijesom, kao...
The etiology of feline dental resorptive lesions is unknown, but some evidence suggests that interac...
SUMMARY The present article is a literature review of Feline Tooth Resorption (TR). Today TR is the ...
Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL), previously known as 'neck lesions,' are commonly kno...
Feline dental resorptive lesions affect more than one third of all adult domestic cats and continue ...
Introduction. Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesion (FORL) is one of the most common and painful or...
Tooth resorption is among the most common and most challenging problems in feline dentistry It is a ...
Feline tooth resorption (TR) is a common and painful disease characterised by loss of mineralised t...
Tooth resorption (TR; progressive destruction of hard dental tissues) varies in prevalence according...