VETERINARY ORAL AND MAXILLOFACIAL PATHOLOGY

VETERINARY ORAL AND MAXILLOFACIAL PATHOLOGY

Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL
Año de edición:
Materia
Veterinaria
ISBN:
978-1-119-22125-8
Páginas:
248
N. de edición:
1
Idioma:
Inglés
Disponibilidad:
Disponible en 2-3 semanas

Descuento:

-5%

Antes:

133,00 €

Despues:

126,35 €

1. A philosophical approach to establishing a diagnosis
2. Histological features of normal oral tissues
3. Tooth development (Odontogenesis)
4. Conditions and diseases of teeth
Odontogenic developmental anomalies and attrition
Primary enamel disorders
Primary dentin disorders
Abnormalities in tooth number
Abnormalities in tooth shape
Tooth discoloration
Dental attrition, abrasion, erosion
Degenerative and Inflammatory disorders of teeth
Pulpitis
Pulp degeneration
Periapical periodontitis
Caries
Plaque and calculus
Tooth resorption
Odontogenic dysplasia
Equine dental diseases
EOTRH
Periodontitis and pulpitis
Nodular hypercementosis (cementoma)
Tooth fractures
Caries
5. Inflammatory lesions of the oral mucosa and jaws
Inflammation of oral mucosa
Gingivitis and periodontitis
Feline chronic gingivostomatitis (FCGS)
Virus-associated stomatitis in cats
Canine stomatitis
Immune-mediated dermatoses with oral involvement
Mucosal drug reactions
Mucocutaneous pyoderma
Esosinophilic stomatitis
Granulomatous stomatitis
Oral candidiasis
Uremia-associated stomatitis
Oral inflammation due to chronic or systemic disease
Inflammation of the jaw
Periodontal osteomyelitis
Lumpy jaw (actinomycosis)
Mandibulofacial/maxillofacial abscesses of mice
Periostitis ossificans
6. Trauma and physical injury
Soft tissue injury
Abrasions and lacerations
Traumatic “granuloma”
Thermal and chemical burns
Traumatic lesions of the teeth and jaws
Disrupted tooth development
Aneurysmal bone cyst
Dentoalveolar trauma
Fractures of the jaw
7. Odontogenic tumors
Approach to odontogenic tumors
Tumors composed of odontogenic epithelium and fibrous stroma
Conventional ameloblastoma
Canine acanthomatous ameloblastoma
Amyloid producing ameloblastoma (CEOT/APOT)
Tumors composed of odontogenic epithelium, ectomesenchyme of the dental papilla and follicle
Ameloblastic fibroma
Feline inductive odontogenic tumor
Tumors composed of odontogenic epithelium, ectomesenchyme of the dental papilla and mineralized dental matrices
Odontoma
Ameloblastic fibro odontoma
Odontoameloblastoma
Cementoblastoma
Odontogenic myxoma
8. Tumors arising from the soft tissues
Melanocytic tumors
Fibroma/Fibrosarcoma
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Oral papilloma
Lymphoma
Neuroendocrine carcinoma (carcinoid)
Granular cell tumor
Mast cell tumor
Plasmacytoma
Vascular tumors
9. Tumors of the jaw
Maxillofacial osteosarcoma
Osteoma
Multilobular sarcoma of bone
Chondrosarcoma
10. Tumor-like proliferative lesions of the oral mucosa and jaws
TLPL of the oral mucosa
Calcinosis circumscripta
Ectopic sebaceous tissue
Follicular lymphoid hyperplasia
Tonsillar polyp
Sublingual nodules and polyps
Histiocytic foam cell nodules
Nodular chondroid hyperplasia/degeneration of the larynx and epiglottis
TLPL of the tooth-bearing regions of the jaw
Gingival hyperplasia/focal fibrous hyperplasia
Craniomandibular osteopathy (lion jaw)
Peripheral giant cell granuloma
FEPLO/POF
Proliferative fibro-osseous lesions of the oral cavity and jaws
Fibrous dysplasia
Ossifying fibroma
11. Odontogenic cysts
Dentigerous cyst
Lateral periodontal and gingival cyst
Periapical (radicular) cyst
Keratin-filled cysts
12. Lesions of the salivary gland
Microanatomy and physiology
Salivary duct obstruction/cysts
Salivary gland infarction
Salivary gland inflammation (sialoadenitis)
Neoplasia of the salivary gland
13. Appendix

Veterinary Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology focuses on methods for establishing a diagnosis and set of differential diagnoses.
• Provides the only text dedicated solely to veterinary oral and maxillofacial pathology
• Guides the pathologist through the thought process of diagnosing oral and maxillofacial lesions
• Focuses on mammalian companion animals, including dogs, cats and horses, with some coverage of ruminants, camelids, and laboratory animal species
• Features access to video clips narrating the process of histological diagnosis on a companion website

Authors
• Brian G. Murphy, DVM, PhD, DACVP, is an Associate Professor at the University of California, Davis, in Davis, California, USA.
• Cynthia M. Bell, DVM, DACVP, is an Associate Professor at the Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas, USA.
• Jason Soukup, DVM, DACVD, is an Associate Professor of Dentistry and Oral Surgery at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in Madison, Wisconsin, USA.