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Please fill in Breed, Age, and Sex before continuing.
Diet & Dental Care
The more context you give us, the more targeted your recommendations will be.
Each meal creates an acid environment in the mouth that can erode enamel. Free feeding means that acid exposure is constant — one of the biggest hidden drivers of dental disease.
High-quality animal protein provides the building blocks for healthy gum tissue. Plant-based proteins alone may not deliver the same support — worth knowing if gum health is a concern.
Please select your dog's current food and diet type.
Upload Dental Photos
Two photos of the side of your dog's mouth — these are the most diagnostically important views.
📸 How to get a good photo
Position your dog in good lighting (outdoors or near a window)
Gently pull the cheek/lip back with one finger to expose the back teeth
Aim for the large pointed tooth at the back — that's the key tooth
Make sure the pink gumline above the teeth is visible
Hold your phone horizontal and use flash if needed
✓
Required
Right Side
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Right cheek pulled back, upper back teeth visible
Focus on the large tooth near the back
✓
Required
Left Side
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Left cheek pulled back, upper back teeth visible
Same angle as the right side photo
Want a more complete analysis? Two optional photos can help us check your dog's front teeth and lower jaw.
✓
Optional
Front Teeth
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Lips pulled back showing front incisors and canine teeth
✓
Optional
Lower Jaw
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Either side showing lower teeth (useful for small breeds)
Please upload at least the two required photos (right and left side) before analysing.
Analysing your dog's teeth…
Our AI is examining each photo carefully
🖼 Examining dental photos
📊 Scoring tartar & gum health
🥗 Building nutrition information
📋 Preparing your report
Results
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Screening Result
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Tartar / Calculus
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0
No Calculus
No hardened deposits visible on the tooth surface.
1
Mild — <⅓ surface coverage
Light tartar along the gumline, covering less than a third of the visible tooth. Minimal deposits below the gumline.
2
Moderate — ⅓ to ⅔ surface coverage
Moderate buildup covering a significant portion of the tooth. Some deposits may extend below the gumline.
3
Severe — >⅔ surface coverage
Heavy tartar covering most or all of the visible tooth surface, extending well below the gumline. Professional cleaning needed.
Calculus Index — AVDC/AAHA standard (0–3)
Gum Health
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PD0
Normal / Healthy (PD0)
Gums are pink and firm. No inflammation, no attachment loss. Sulcus depth normal (typically under 3mm in dogs).
PD1
Gingivitis Only (PD1)
Gums are red or slightly swollen but no bone or attachment loss has occurred yet. This stage is fully reversible with cleaning and home care.
PD2
Early Periodontitis (PD2)
Less than 25% attachment loss. Early bone changes visible on X-ray. Pockets may begin to form. Professional treatment needed — some damage has begun.
PD3–4
Moderate–Advanced Periodontitis (PD3–4)
25–50%+ attachment loss. Significant bone loss, possible recession, tooth mobility, and pain. Veterinary treatment is urgent. Some damage is irreversible.
Periodontal Disease Staging — AVDC/AAHA/WSAVA standard (PD0–PD4)
Structure
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0
Intact
All visible tooth surfaces appear whole and undamaged. No chips, fractures, or missing teeth detected.
1
Minor Damage
Small chips or wear visible on one or more teeth. Enamel may be compromised but the tooth structure is largely intact.
2
Fracture or Missing Tooth
A visible fracture exposing dentine or pulp, or one or more teeth appear missing. Veterinary assessment is recommended.
3
Severe Structural Damage
Multiple fractures, significant tooth loss, or severe wear affecting multiple teeth. Prompt veterinary attention needed.
Structural Index — AVDC screening criteria (0–3)
📊 Left vs Right Comparison
Dogs almost always chew more on one side — whether from habit, discomfort, or a past dental issue. When tartar or gum scores are similar on both sides, that's generally reassuring. When one side scores notably higher, it can be a signal worth paying attention to: it may mean your dog is favouring that side, which can accelerate disease there while the underused side stays cleaner. It can also point to something localised — a sore tooth, a hidden fracture, or early infection — that wouldn't show up in an overall score. That's why we look at both sides separately.
Right Side
Tartar—
Gums—
Left Side
Tartar—
Gums—
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📈 Since Your Last Scan
🔍 Key Findings
Here's what stood out in the photos — both the clinical picture and what it actually means for your dog day to day.
Periodontal Stage
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🔬 Understanding Your Dog's Diet
🍽 Your Dog's Food Format
What to Keep in Mind
Things Worth Being Aware Of
🦴 Treats & Snacks
🔬 The Science Behind It
The Most Important Thing Right Now
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💡 Suggestions Worth Considering
📅 A Suggested Path Forward
First Month
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Two Months In
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Three Months
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🪥 Home Care
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Don't forget the bowls
Food and water bowls — especially water bowls — develop a slippery bacterial biofilm called a slime layer within 24 hours of use. That biofilm is a direct source of oral bacteria that contributes to plaque formation. Washing bowls daily with hot soapy water (or running them through the dishwasher) is one of the simplest things you can do to reduce your dog's overall bacterial load between teeth cleanings.
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Schedule Your Next Scan
Recheck recommended in 60 days
Screening tool only. NOBL Dental Tracker analyses visible tooth surfaces from photographs. Subgingival disease, periodontal pockets, and root health cannot be assessed from photos. Any orange or red result should be discussed with your veterinarian promptly. This tool does not replace professional veterinary care.