July 2006
Dr Gerhard Steenkamp
A 5 year-old Dachshund is presented as a, second opinion ,with a draining fistula of the right
maxilla, ventral to the eye. This dog started with a similar lesion 6 months ago and was then
treated by a veterinarian for a carnassial tooth (108) abscess. The treatment consisted of an
extraction of the carnassial tooth (108) as well as antibiotic treatment. The dog recovered,
and the initial swelling ventral to the eye disappeared. After 2 months the lesions appeared
again and the dog was presented to the same veterinarian who anaesthetised the dog and found no
apparent cause for the condition on oral examination. A further course of antibiotics was
prescribed the lesions disappeared for a short while after it reappeared
again.
d carnassial fistula.jpg
a) What would your differential diagnosis (dd’s) be for a swelling ventral to the eye?
b) How would you confirm the presence of abscense of your dd’s in (a)?
c) What would be the treatment of choice in this particular case?
a) Tooth root abscess, root remnants, foreign body, trauma (bite wounds),
tumour.
b) Tooth root abscess – History,oral examination (see if tooth has fractures or not, or if
there are severe periodontal disease surrounding the tooth), radiographs.
Root remnants – History, oral examination and radiography as above.
Foreign body – History, extra-and intraoral examination, ultrasound examination, radiography (with
or without contrast).
Trauma – History, extra-and intraoral examination and possibly radiography (if the dog was bitten
there may be underlying bone pathology).
Tumour – History, intra-and extraoral examination, radiography (possibly CT[computed tomography])
and biopsy.
c) From the history an infectious cause seems most likely, as the patient responded very well
to antibiotic treatment. Peri-tumour necrosis and infection may sometimes respond to
antibiotic treatment but then the swelling will decrease by a small amount initially, if at
all. However, the swelling will not disappear and carry on enlarging as the tumour
grows. Radiography revealed the rostral 2 roots of the 108 which was not extracted by the
referring veterinarian. Tooth root abscesses results from endodontic or
periodontic infection that reaches the root tip (apex). Regardless of the route of entry the
entire pulp will be infected, and in a tooth with multiple roots (3 in the case of 108) all the
canals with pulp will be infectious. It is therefore imperative to fully remove all the roots
of such a tooth. Any fragment that is left behind does have pulp and will therefore
perpetuate the infection. If a clinician is uncertain if all the roots have been removed
totally after extracting such a tooth, radiography of the area is indicated to make sure there are
no more pieces of tooth left behind.
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