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Dentistry and Floating the Teeth of HorsesIntroduction
The horse evolved to eat large quantities of forage, often containing abrasive silicates, for prolonged periods of the day. This placed great demands on the teeth. To compensate the horse developed teeth with very long crowns, called hypsodont teeth. The long reserve of crown is embedded in the deep alveolus of the surrounding bone in the young horse. Unlike humans, who's teeth are fully erupted at maturity, the equine teeth slowly erupt over most of the horses life at a rate of about 2 - 3 mm/year. In the ideal world this eruption rate just matches the wear rate and the rate sustains healthy teeth over the life of the horse. Domestication and the recent availability of inexpensive concentrates has changed this balance and to some degree the problems faced by horses today:
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