Intraoral dental X-rays use small digital sensors placed inside your pet’s mouth to capture detailed images of tooth roots, jaw bone and surrounding structures. Because most dental health issues occur below the gumline, a dental radiograph is required to find issues that a visual dental exam can’t see, especially in cats and small-breed dogs.

What Are Vet Dental X-rays?

Vet dental X-rays are specialised mouth X-rays taken with a small intra-oral X-ray unit and digital sensors that fit inside your pet’s mouth.

They allow the Ormeau Vets team to see:

Because up to 60–70% of the tooth lies below the gum line, dental X-rays are often the only way to detect serious problems.


Why Dental Health Matters for Pets

Poor dental health can cause far more than “doggy breath”:

Regular dental check-ups, professional cleans and dental X-rays where indicated help us catch problems before they lead to major pain or systemic illness.


Benefits of Vet Dental X-rays

Early Detection of Hidden Problems

Dental X-rays can reveal:

Finding these issues early means less invasive treatment and better long-term comfort for your pet.


Accurate Diagnosis and Treatment Planning

X-rays help us decide:

This precision reduces the risk of:


How Vet Dental X-rays Are Taken at Ormeau Vet

1. Anaesthesia and Dental Exam

For safety and accuracy, vet dental X-rays are taken under general anaesthetic as part of a professional dental procedure.

This allows us to:

Before anaesthesia, we perform a pre-anaesthetic health check and may recommend blood tests to screen organ function.


2. Positioning and Image Capture

Once your pet is anaesthetised:

  1. A digital dental sensor is placed inside the mouth.

  2. A small dental X-ray unit outside the mouth emits a very short X-ray pulse.

  3. The image appears almost instantly on our screen, allowing us to check quality and adjust positioning if needed.

We take images of:

This gives us a complete picture of your pet’s oral health.


Understanding Vet Dental X-ray Findings

Common Conditions Seen on Dental X-rays

Dental X-rays frequently reveal:

Many of these conditions would be missed without X-rays, even during a careful dental exam.


Healthy vs Problem Teeth

On X-ray, a healthy tooth typically shows:

Problem teeth may show:

Your Ormeau veterinarian will explain what we see and why certain treatments are recommended.


Dental X-rays vs Other Imaging Techniques

Why X-rays Are the Gold Standard for Teeth

While standard skull X-rays and CT scans can show bones, intra-oral dental X-rays give:

Ultrasound and standard external X-rays are not detailed enough for most dental decisions, which is why dedicated dental radiography is so important.


Safety of Vet Dental X-rays

Radiation Exposure

Dental X-rays use very low doses of radiation, and:

The risk from occasional dental X-rays is very small, especially compared with the benefit of detecting painful disease.


Sedation and Comfort

Because your pet is under general anaesthetic for dental work:

Our team monitors your pet’s anaesthetic closely the entire time to keep them safe and comfortable.


Cost of Vet Dental X-ray Services

What Affects the Price?

The cost of dental X-rays can vary depending on:

Although they add to the cost of a dental procedure, X-rays often save money in the long run by preventing missed disease, failed treatments and repeat anaesthetics.


Pet Insurance and Dental Cover

Some pet insurance policies:

It’s worth checking your policy or speaking with your provider to see what’s included.


If your pet has bad breath, visible tartar, broken teeth or is due for a dental check, talk to the team in Ormeau about whether dental X-rays should be part of their next visit.