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Advice for cat with gingivitis ?

Question:

I took my cat to the vet for a complete checkup and he said the cat has gingivitis. He showed the gums to me. He said luckily it wasn't too bad, with only the very edge of the gums affected. He gave me an antibiotic to give him but said it was very hard to cure gingivitis permanently and if the cat ever has trouble eating he would either need to go on a regime of antibiotics and steroid injections or have his teeth pulled.

This cat has strictly been an inside cat and has no contact with other cats for at least four years which ruled out feline leukemia. Besides he is up-to-date on all vaccines.

I had the vet listen VERY carefully for a heart murmur because my last cat died from that. He said his heart sounded fine.

Anyway I was wondering if there was something I could do to minimize the chance that this will get serious. The vet didn't seem to think so.

What about food? Does it matter if I give him dry food? I prefer it because it seems to leave much less tartar on the teeth.


Answer:

If it is not bad, I would try keeping his teeth wiped down with guaze (just wrap it around your finger. Getting the back teeth between teeth and gum most important spots.). My boy who recently passed away, had teeth trouble from the time he was two. But it was BAD. His gums got raging red and he made smacking motions with his mouth so you know he was uncomfortable. I did have most all his back teeth pulled and for the next 6 years right up to his death, he at least did not have teeth problems. Seems they can be allergic to their own plaque which causes this cycle. Can you get a picture of his gums and post it somewhere?

My Tuppence has gingivitis, and it's chronic. She gets a teeth cleaning every year (after the usual blood workup to be certain she'll survive the anesthetic).

Unfortunately, she also has FIV (gingivitis is common in FIV cats). She also has always been an inside cat. Vet never did figure out where she got it from. Possibly from the pet store I purchased her from (in 89), but it never showed up until ... crap I can't remember, it was mid to late 90s though.

She gets an antibiotic pulse (one week every month). She rarely eats crunchy food, and has had several of her teeth pulled (due to abscess), she seems fine. Still bounds over to her dish when it's "stinky" time.

To the OP, see if your cat will eat crunchy food (the vet said that was pretty helpful). Tuppence never gets steroid shots, just the antibiotics (she likes it cause it's mixed with baby food).

His previous owner gave him nothing but dry food. He eats it without a problem. I have been giving him a little "treat" these past couple of days - a little bit of canned food mixed with his antibiotic. He's in heaven.

The vet did not think his teeth needed cleaning. He didn't seem to think plaque was a contributing factor.



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