Proper dental care can help reduce chronic inflammation and may improve overall systemic health and quality of life.
In this dvm360 interview, Heidi Lobprise, DVM, DAVDC, covers decision-making for extractions, how to talk to clients about the oral systemic link, feline stomatitis and tooth resorption, and more.
RELATED: How to decide when dental extraction improves senior pet health
Editor’s note: This dvm360 Q&A has been lightly edited and consolidated from a verbal interview to better fit a written format while retaining the substance of the original conversation.

Lobprise: For midrange periodontal disease with 25% to 50% attachment loss, we decide based on the tooth and the patient. We are less likely to spend time saving a small incisor than a canine or carnassial. If the patient has systemic disease, such as heart or kidney problems, the additional anesthetic time to preserve a tooth may not be in the pet’s best interest. Chronic inflammation from a problematic tooth can worsen other conditions, so extraction may make the patient healthier. Client preference and cost also influence the decision.
Lobprise: Owners often research and bring ideas to the clinic. By the time they reach a specialist, they usually already know there is a problem because their general practitioner has identified it. Education is key. Explain that dental disease is ongoing—often below the gumline—and requires professional care under general anesthesia. Quick cosmetic fixes and nonanesthetic cleanings do not address the true disease.
Lobprise: Continue client education about the progressive nature of dental disease and why professional care is necessary. Perform appropriate diagnostics when possible and stabilize systemic issues so patients are in the best possible shape for referral. Explain risks and benefits clearly so owners understand the reasons for treatment.
Lobprise: Emphasize that chronic oral inflammation is likely driving much of the systemic impact we see. Historically, we talked about bacteria entering the bloodstream. Now we focus more on how chronic sterile inflammation from dental disease can accelerate aging and affect multiple organs. Explain that treating oral inflammation can reduce that systemic inflammatory burden and improve overall health.
Lobprise: For severe stomatitis, we often recommend full mouth extractions because the inflammation and ulceration severely affect quality of life. Tooth resorption is common and may be painful when the lesion reaches the crown. Management is case dependent, and extractions are performed selectively when resorption is causing discomfort.
Lobprise: Senior patients need careful workup and stabilization of comorbidities so they can tolerate general anesthesia. Often, dental surgery in senior [patients] addresses chronic inflammation that is harming other organ systems. We balance risk and benefit, and, when possible, removing oral inflammation can substantially improve how the patient feels in 2 weeks.
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