What Every Vet Should Know About Vital Pulp Therapy—and Why Precision Matters
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A fractured canine tooth tests more than a dog’s bite—it tests our choices as clinicians. We sat down with researchers Ethan Elazegui and Dr. Elias Wolfs to reexamine vital pulp therapy with new data, honest surprises, and practical guidance you can use on your next dentistry day. The conversation starts with what holds true: an ~80% success rate keeps vital pulp therapy squarely in the toolkit as a tooth-sparing option when pulp exposure is recent and the tissue is viable. Then we challenge a common belief: younger dogs didn’t show a significant edge in outcomes, pushing us to prioritize indications and technique over age alone.
We break down what most affects success, and one factor stands out—pulp dressing extrusion. Precision during placement isn’t a nicety; it’s the difference between healing and failure. We also talk timing, including a small-sample quirk that reminds us to interpret data with care. From there, we explore material science: MTA’s respected performance versus biodentine’s faster set, strong biocompatibility, and reduced discoloration risk. Human literature suggests comparable success and better cementum repair for biodentine, a promising path for veterinary endodontics as adoption grows.
Beyond procedures and products, we highlight the power of mentorship and student peer review to raise research quality—and why that matters for everyday clinical decisions. We even look ahead to AI-driven radiograph interpretation, where large, annotated datasets could help flag subtle endodontic and periodontal changes and support more consistent decision-making in general practice.
You’ll leave with clear steps for case selection, referral thresholds, and owner communication about follow-ups—because even good cases need rechecks to catch the 1-in-5 that fail months or years later. If you care about predictable outcomes, better materials, and sharper imaging insights, this conversation is for you. Enjoy the episode, share it with a colleague who does dentistry, and if it helped your practice, subscribe and leave a quick review to help others find the show.
JAVMA article: https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.25.04.0224
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