Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2398029 | Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery | 2010 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Feline orofacial pain syndrome (FOPS) is a pain disorder of cats with behavioural signs of oral discomfort and tongue mutilation. This report describes the findings from a case series of 113 cats including 100 Burmese. FOPS is suspected to be a neuropathic pain disorder and the predominance within the Burmese cat breed suggests an inherited disorder, possibly involving central and/or ganglion processing of sensory trigeminal information. The disease is characterised by an episodic, typically unilateral, discomfort with pain-free intervals. The discomfort is triggered, in many cases, by mouth movements. The disease is often recurrent and with time may become unremitting - 12% of cases in this series were euthanased as a consequence of the condition. Sensitisation of trigeminal nerve endings as a consequence of oral disease or tooth eruption appears to be an important factor in the aetiology - 63% of cases had a history of oral lesions and at least 16% experienced their first sign of discomfort during eruption of permanent teeth. External factors can also influence the disease as FOPS events could be directly linked to a situation causing anxiety in 20% of cats. FOPS can be resistant to traditional analgesics and in some cases successful management required anti-convulsants with an analgesic effect.
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Authors
Clare BVMS, PhD, DipECVN, MRCVS, Sarah BVSc, DipECVBM-CA, CCAB, MRCVS, Danièlle A. BSc, BVM&S, PhD, MACVSc, MRCVS, Susan Penelope BSc, Norman BVM&S, DipAVDC, DiplEVDC, MRCVS, Angus Kennedy PhD, MSc, BSc, DipSAD CMath, MIMA, FSS Reader,