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Review Article| Volume 35, ISSUE 4, P913-942, July 2005

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Update on the Etiology of Tooth Resorption in Domestic Cats

      Feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL) were first recognized and histologically differentiated from caries in the 1920s [
      • Hopewell-Smith A.
      The process of osteolysis and odontolysis, or so-called “absorption” of calcified tissues: a new and original investigation.
      ,
      • Reiter A.M.
      Feline “odontolysis” in the 1920s: the forgotten histopathological study of feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL).
      ]. Some anecdotal reports describing caries-like lesions at the cervical region of feline teeth followed in the 1950s and 1960s, until two microscopic studies in the 1970s again revealed that FORL were not caries but a type of tooth resorption [
      • Kerebel B.
      • Daculsi G.
      Histologie et histopathologie dentaires du chat.
      ,
      • Schneck G.W.
      • Osborn J.W.
      Neck lesions in the teeth of cats.
      ]. A recent study showed that cats with FORL have a significantly lower urine specific gravity and significantly higher serum concentration of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) compared with cats without FORL [
      • Reiter A.M.
      The role of calciotropic factors in the etiology of feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions (FORL).
      ], indicating that multiple tooth resorption in domestic cats could be the manifestation of some systemic insult rather than a local cause. In this article, the histologic and radiographic appearance of FORL and certain other peculiarities of feline teeth are reviewed. An attempt is then made to compare these findings with changes of the periodontium induced by administration of excess vitamin D or vitamin D metabolites in experimental animals.
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