Cat Dental Health Score
Assess your cat’s oral health, detect early signs of dental disease, and get personalized care recommendations.
🦷 Feline Oral Health Assessment
Answer questions about your cat’s teeth, gums, breath, and eating behavior
Cat Dental Health Score: Complete Feline Oral Care Guide
As a veterinary dentist with over 15 years of feline clinical experience, I’ve created this Cat Dental Health Score tool to help cat owners assess their cat’s oral health. Dental disease is the most common health problem in cats — affecting over 85% of cats over age 3. Unlike dogs, cats also suffer from FORLs (feline odontoclastic resorptive lesions), painful tooth defects. Early detection and intervention prevent pain, tooth loss, and systemic health issues affecting the heart, liver, and kidneys.
Understanding the Dental Score Scale
• 0-3 (Excellent): Healthy mouth — maintain daily brushing and annual checkups.
• 4-6 (Mild Disease): Early gingivitis — improve home care, consider professional cleaning.
• 7-9 (Moderate Disease): Periodontitis stage 1-2 — veterinary dental cleaning recommended.
• 10-13 (Severe Disease): Advanced periodontitis — urgent veterinary care, likely extractions needed.
• 14-18 (Critical): Severe oral disease with systemic risk — immediate veterinary attention required.
Feline-Specific Dental Conditions
- Gingivitis: Inflammation of gums — reversible with cleaning, common in cats
- Periodontitis: Loss of tooth support structures — irreversible, leads to tooth loss
- FORLs (Tooth Resorption): Extremely painful lesions where tooth is destroyed — affects 30-70% of cats, requires extraction
- Stomatitis: Severe, painful inflammation of entire mouth — often requires full mouth extractions
- Feline Juvenile Gingivitis: Young cats with severe gum inflammation
Signs of Dental Pain in Cats
Cats are masters at hiding pain. Watch for these subtle signs:
- Chewing on one side of the mouth only
- Dropping food while eating
- Eating slower than usual or avoiding hard food
- Pawing at the mouth
- Excessive drooling (sometimes with blood)
- Bad breath (halitosis)
- Weight loss or decreased appetite
- Hiding, irritability, reduced grooming
How to Perform a Home Dental Exam
- Lift the lips: Gently raise your cat’s upper lip to inspect teeth and gums.
- Check breath: Notice odor from close range (normal = minimal to no smell).
- Examine gums: Healthy gums are pink, firm, and have a “orange peel” texture.
- Look for tartar: Yellow/brown buildup on teeth, especially molars (carnassial teeth).
- Check for FORLs: Look for small pink/red spots on teeth — these are painful resorptive lesions.
- Check for loose teeth: Gently press on teeth — they should not move.
- Observe eating: Dropping food, chewing on one side, or reluctance to eat hard food indicates pain.
Stage of Periodontal Disease in Cats
- Stage 0 (Healthy): No inflammation or tartar. Healthy pink gums.
- Stage 1 (Gingivitis): Gum inflammation without attachment loss. Reversible with cleaning.
- Stage 2 (Early Periodontitis): Up to 25% attachment loss. Bad breath, tartar.
- Stage 3 (Moderate Periodontitis): 25-50% attachment loss. Loose teeth, gum recession.
- Stage 4 (Advanced Periodontitis): Over 50% attachment loss. Tooth loss, abscess risk, bone loss on X-ray.
Home Dental Care for Cats
Brushing (Gold Standard)
Use cat-specific toothpaste (never human toothpaste — contains xylitol/fluoride toxic). Introduce slowly with finger brush, then cat toothbrush. Brush daily or at least 3x weekly. Focus on outer surfaces of teeth, especially canines and carnassial teeth.
Dental Chews & Water Additives
VOHC (Veterinary Oral Health Council) approved products: C.E.T. chews, dental treats. Water additives (chlorhexidine, zinc) help reduce bacteria. Dental gels can be applied without brushing.
Diet
Prescription dental diets (Hill’s t/d, Royal Canin Dental) have larger kibble texture that mechanically cleans teeth. Wet food is not better for dental health — dry food with special kibble helps, but brushing is essential.
Professional Dental Cleaning
Under anesthesia with full mouth X-rays — typically recommended annually for cats over age 3. Cats with FORLs or stomatitis may need more frequent care and extractions.
Health Risks of Untreated Dental Disease
- Heart disease (endocarditis): Bacteria from mouth enter bloodstream, damage heart valves
- Kidney disease: Chronic inflammation and bacterial infection affect renal function — especially dangerous for cats
- Liver disease: Bacteremia causes hepatic inflammation
- Chronic pain: Cats hide pain well — dental disease causes constant discomfort, changes behavior
- Tooth root abscesses: Painful infections causing facial swelling, fever, anorexia
- FORL pain: Feline tooth resorption is extremely painful — cats often show no signs until severe
Breeds Prone to Dental Problems
• Persian, Himalayan, Exotic Shorthair — crowded teeth, malocclusion
• Siamese, Oriental, Abyssinian — prone to FORLs (tooth resorption)
• Maine Coon, Ragdoll — gingivitis, stomatitis risk
• Any purebred cat — higher risk than mixed breeds
FORLs (Feline Odontoclastic Resorptive Lesions)
This painful condition affects 30-70% of domestic cats. The cat’s own cells (odontoclasts) destroy tooth structure, starting at the gum line. Signs: pink/red spot on tooth, difficulty eating, drooling. Treatment: extraction of affected teeth — no cure. Regular dental X-rays are essential for detection.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Daily brushing is ideal. At minimum, 3-4 times per week. Consistency matters more than duration — even 30 seconds daily is effective. Use cat-specific toothpaste (enzymatic).
No. Persistent bad breath (halitosis) is the most common sign of dental disease caused by bacteria. Healthy cats should not have foul breath. Bad breath can also indicate kidney disease.
Feline Odontoclastic Resorptive Lesions (FORLs) are painful tooth defects where the cat’s own cells destroy tooth structure. Affects 30-70% of cats. Signs: pink spots on teeth, difficulty eating. Treatment is extraction — no cure.
NEVER. Human toothpaste contains xylitol (toxic to cats) and fluoride (dangerous if swallowed). Use only cat-specific enzymatic toothpaste in poultry or seafood flavors.
$300-$1,500 depending on geographic location, need for X-rays, extractions, and anesthesia protocol. Cats with FORLs or stomatitis may cost more due to multiple extractions.
VOHC-approved dental chews reduce plaque and tartar by 20-30% but don’t replace brushing. Look for C.E.T. chews or other VOHC-approved products. Dental treats are not a substitute for professional cleaning.
Most cats need first professional cleaning by age 2-4. Annual dental cleanings with X-rays recommended for cats over age 3. Breeds prone to FORLs (Siamese) may need more frequent monitoring.
Indirectly yes. Severe dental disease causes bacteremia (bacteria in blood) leading to endocarditis (heart valve infection), kidney disease, or liver disease. Stomatitis can cause severe pain and anorexia.
Final Thoughts: Prioritize Your Cat’s Dental Health
Your Cat Dental Health Score is a critical indicator of overall wellness. Dental disease is preventable but progressive — early intervention saves pain, money, and systemic health complications. Cats are experts at hiding oral pain — don’t wait for obvious signs. Start a daily brushing routine (yes, it’s possible!), schedule annual veterinary oral exams with X-rays, and don’t ignore bad breath or changes in eating behavior. A healthy mouth means a healthier, happier, longer-lived cat.
For authoritative veterinary dentistry information, visit AVMA Pet Dental Care and Veterinary Oral Health Council (VOHC).