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Pre-Surgical Information
Spaying or neutering your pet is a big step! There is a lot to consider
when we are planning your pet’s surgery. Here is some information to help
you make wise decisions.
Click here . . .
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Special LibraryOur Special Library
is a collection of informative articles on a variety of health topics.
Click here . . .
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Discharge InstructionsClick here for
information on how to care for your pet at home.
Click here . . .
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Equine
Dentistry
How long can a horse live? Until his teeth wear out.
That's how important dental care can be for you horse.
Dr. Nield (that's me) has been practicing Advanced Equine
Dentistry since 1997. I was one of the first veterinarians
in the state to use power instruments. I have had extensive
training from such well-known veterinarian dentists as Jack
Easley, DVM, and Scott Greene, DVM, and years of experience
since. My training as both a veterinarian and as an equine
dentist allow me to see the whole picture. Not every thin
horse has bad teeth, and not every deviation form "textbook
normal" is a bad thing. My years of experience help me
know what needs "fixing," and what is normal. I tell you
this not to blow my own horn, but because there are lots of
opinions out there as to what constitutes "good dentistry," and
I want you to know where I am coming from.
Floating
It all starts off with the Float Job. To be honest, there
is not really a good simple definition of what it really means
to "float" a horses teeth. To really understand what it
means to float a horse's teeth, we have to start at the very
beginning, which is the horse's mouth itself. Horses have
teeth, and people have teeth, but that's pretty much as far as
the similarity goes. Equine teeth are radically different
from human teeth, both in form and in function. Equine
teeth are what the scientists call hypsodont teeth. This
sounds like something a dinosaur might have, but all it really
means is that the teeth grow throughout the horse's life.
Well, they don't really grow throughout the horse's life.
They start out as long as they ever will be (about three inches
long), and they never get any longer. It's just that all
the length is hidden up in the horse's jaw. Horse teeth
work just like the lead in a mechanical pencil. Only
the tip sticks out to chew/rub on the paper. As the tooth
wears down from chewing, the tooth erupts (moves down) a little
more. The images show a horse skull with the jaws burred out to
show the tooth roots. To the left is a young 7-year-old
horse. The lead here is new and long. To the right
is an old 20-something horse. No need to burr this skull.
The teeth
 are
ready to fall out. Horse teeth wear about 2 or 3
millimeters every year. Coincidentally (or not so much
so), the teeth also erupt about 2.5 to 3 millimeters a year. So
the tooth, just like the lead in the mechanical pencil, gets
shorter and shorter until all that is left is a little stub that
finally gets wobbly and then falls out.
You can do the math. Three inches of total tooth minus 1
inch (which is the length of old teeth when they finally fall
out) equals 2 inches of tooth to wear away, which is 50
millimeters. Divide that by the 2 to 3 millimeters the
teeth wear each year and you get 17 to 25 years of tooth
lifespan. Add five years which is the age at when all the
molars are in wear, and you get 22 to 30 years, which turns out
to be about as long as most horses live. Isn't science
cool?
Horses do not chew "up and down." They chew side to side,
just like a cow. Cows are just more obvious about the
side-to-side nature of their chewing stroke. When a
horse's molars come into contact, the tooth in the lower jaw
comes up into contact with the wider tooth in the upper jaw,
then slides sideways across the wider upper tooth in an
inside-to-outside direction, then drops down to end the grinding
action.
  
Here the teeth are coming into contact Here they are
grinding sideways Here they are separating.
A fundamental principle here is that a lot of the time, the
lower tooth never makes cont act
with the outside edge of the upper tooth. With soft diets,
the horse does not have to make a very long chew stroke to grind
up the feed. Try this yourself. Go out to eat at a
bad restaurant. Order a tough steak and a baked potato.
Chew them both, one at a time, and see how your teeth grind
together. When you chew the potato, your teeth do not
grind together much. The chew stroke is mostly up and down.
But when you chew the tough steak, you will find yourself making
a big broad grinding motion that is largely side-to-side. You
subconsciously adjust your chewing stroke to match the
coarseness of what you are chewing.
When horses eat soft diets, they do the same thing. A
softer diet results in them chewing with a small grinding
stroke, and the bottom tooth never makes much contact with the
outside edge of the upper tooth. As a result, a lot of
wear happens on the middle and inside edge of the tooth but
little wear happens on the outside edge, and a sharp point is
the result.
So what counts as a soft diet for a horse? Basically,
anything but grass. In the wild, horses eat some very
coarse forages most of the year. In the spring, the grass
is young and soft, but during the late summer, fall, and winter,
the grass is quite tough. This means that horses fed grass
hay, which is harvested in the young soft stage, are eating a
softer diet than nature intended. Alfalfa hay is even
softer, as alfalfa does not contain all the fiber and silicates
that grass has. All grains count as soft, too. So
basically, most of the things we feed our horses are softer than
the native grasses nature intended them to eat, and promote
point development.
P oints
do a lot of bad things. Points can traumatize the cheeks,
causing pain and sometimes quidding (the intentional packing of
feed in the cheeks to protect the painful soft tissues).
Points also make it impossible to make a good broad chew stroke,
which makes it difficult for the horse to chew it's food.
Some of the things a horse does to compensate for points an lead
to other wear-related abnormalities that will be discussed
below. The image to the left shows some of the cuts points
can cause in a live horse.

Floating is the removal of these sharp points. Done well,
floating removes the sharp points, does not remove hardly any of
the chewing surface of the tooth, and removes enough of the
enamel fold above the point so that the float job will last a
year or more. The goal is to turn a radius on the outside
edge that is big enough to allow for the 2.5 to 3 millimeters of
wear that is going to happen while not allowing for new points
to form. This means that the "radius" actually has to be
an "assymetrical radius" which leaves as much chewing surface as
possible while removing enough of the enamel folds to prevent
new points from forming too soon.
Beyond Floating
There can be a number of abnormal things that can happen to a
horses teeth. These abnormal wear patterns all interfere
with the horse's ability to chew properly. They have
various causes, and they generally have interesting-sounding
names that date back to the 1800's. Fixing these
abnormalities is beyond "floating." The fact is, we don't
have a really good name for this kind of dental treatment.
Some folks call it Equilibration. Others favor Balancing.
Some call it Corrective Dentistry. Others call it Advanced
Equine Dentistry. Whatever it is called, it is both an art and a
science, and it involves power tools. What's not to like
about that?
 
Above and to the left is what is known as a Wave Mouth because
of the wavy nature of the chewing surface. To the right is a
hook, named after the hook-like beak that has formed on the
first upper tooth.
 
Above and to the left is a Ramp, which is like a hook only
bigger. To the right is what is known as Exaggerated
Transverse Ridges, or ETR's. Here, the normal irregular
surface of the teeth has become abnormally exaggerated.
This is not an all-inclusive list. There are a number of
other interesting abnormalities that can happen. One key
point is that every mouth is different, both in shape and in
function, and they all need to be evaluated individually.
Incisor Problems
The incisors can develop a whole other set of problems.
Sometime incisor problems develop as a result of problems
happening farther back in the mouth. Other times they
develop because of problems happening with the incisors
themselves. Sometimes they need to be fixed so the molars
can work properly. Other times they are adaptive changes
that actually help the molars (which may be abnormal or not)
work better. It takes skill and judgement to tell the
difference.
Performance Dentistry
A horse's teeth can have a major effect on their perfomance.
Since we communicate with our horses largely through their mouth
via the bit, problems here can mean problems in performance.
Can you imagine Liberace playing with a hangnail, or Fred
Astaire dancing with a bunion? In events where focus is
vital, or where 1/10th of a second can mean all the difference,
properly-done Bit Seats can make all the difference. Bit
seats are not really meant for the bit to ride in. A
properly fitted bit will not bang into the first cheek teeth.
But, and this is true for both stiff and broken bits, they will
press the cheeks onto the first cheek teeth. And if those
first cheek teeth have sharp points and edges on them, there
will be pain when that happens.
 
Above are two images of that first cheek tooth before bit seats.
Notice the sharp points and edges.
 
Then two images after bit seats. The forst cheek teeth are
now round and smooth like a cue ball.
This provides a smooth, pain-free surface for the cheeks.
And let's not forget wolf teeth. Wolf teeth are not the
big teeth you bang the bit into when you bit up an older
gelding. They are small teeth positioned just in front of
the first cheek teeth. They are mentioned in the section
on bit seats because they cause the same kinds of problems that
sharp first cheek teeth do. They cause pain when the bit
presses the cheeks on to them. They should be removed from
every horse that has them before the horse starts training.
Routine Dentistry
How often do horses need dental work? Most horses should
have their teeth examined every year. Horses that I
personally float may or may not need additional work done every
year. It is not uncommon for them to not need follow-up
work for 18 months. But I still recommend an annual exam
because a lot can happen in a year. Also, horses that I
personally float usually don't need as much follow-up work,
which means that it costs less. I find that horses that
receive annual dental checkups and work rarely develop problems.
Every 2-year-old should have dental work before going into
training. Emphasis on before. The goal is to make
training as stress-free as possible, and that may not happen if
they have sharp points and wolf teeth interfering. Yes,
your 2-year-old will soon shed his first caps and will need
another bit seat soon, but when they are just starting out in
the bit, a comfortable bit seat can be very valuable.
The older the horse is, them more likely he is to need
corrective dentistry. Our goal with the older horses is to
optimize the way he chews, not to make his teeth conform to a
pre-determined standard of perfect. We try to minimize the
amount of tooth we remove, because they only have so much tooth
to work with, and it has to last.
Equine Dentistry is a big, big field, with way too many details
to cover on one web page. We look forward to seeing you
and your horses, and helping them and you to get the most out of
their visit.
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