🐶 Fresh Breath, Happy Pets! - Elevate your pet's oral hygiene game today!
Vetoquinol Dentahex Pet Oral Hygiene Rinse is an 8oz dental spray designed to effectively reduce plaque and freshen breath in dogs and cats. With a unique formula containing 0.00001% Zinc Gluconate, it not only eliminates bad breath but also supports healthy teeth and gums, making it a superior alternative to traditional dental care methods.
Number of Items | 1 |
Unit Count | 8.0 Fl Oz |
Liquid Volume | 8 Fluid Ounces |
S**U
Works very well
It was first prescribed to my dog by my vet dentist after tooth extraction. Thr product works very well, and I am so glad I found it on Amazon, and it's much cheaper than buying at the vet. Highly recommended.
O**A
Eliminates bad breath!
This does work! My dog has some health issues that contribute to his bad breath!I just put it on his favorite food…watermelon and he chows it down!
L**L
Would like to be able to read directions
Please try to Not put a label over the directions!? I know I can kinda see them with the light shining through but it should be basic product packaging knowledge to not cover up the directions.
D**E
Cat parents 🚨🚨🚨READ!!!!! Tips
I bought his for my cat because his teeth are not so great. He has mild gum disease and will need some dental work. I want to preserve what I can. I started this about 2 weeks ago. I use a plastic syringe I do 2 ml total and 1 ml on each side of his gums. THE CAT WILL DROOL ALOT!! don’t be alarmed, the drool gets less and less. I use it once every night, it’s not pleasant for my fur baby, but it’s helping so much!! The first pic with the fingers was taken before and the second picture was after 2 weeks once a night and the difference is INSANE, even the gums are less inflamed. All in all, it’s unpleasant for them and he hates the taste but the result are AMAZING.
J**A
seems to help
seems to help
P**O
Superb product ... but ya gotta USE IT!
One of my cats (recently arrived off the street) had severe gingivitis, so bad that my vet didn't want to give her a dental cleaning because of the excessive bleeding it might cause. The vet recommended daily application of Dentahex for a month before dentistry. After a month of Dentahex treatment, my vet was thrilled with the improvement, and my cat now has a much safer dental appointment scheduled. The vet was so pleased that she cut the Dentahex treatments back to three times a week from once a day. (Can't tell you how happy that made both of us ... me and the cat.)The label on the bottle tells you to squirt the Dentahex along the gumline on each side of the mouth, then let it spread through the oral cavity. I'm against that, and so is my vet. Neither of us wants the cat ingesting more of this stuff than absolutely necessary. (Read the warning on your own bottle of mouthwash; if you swallow a hefty mouthful, you're urged to seek immediate medical attention.)Here's what I do: I get brand-name Q-Tips. They have more cotton at the tip than the store brands. I let 2 or 3 of them marinate for a few minutes in the Dentahex, so that the tips get super-saturated. That way, if you can just (gently) press the business end of the Q-Tip for a second or two against the animal's gums (upper and lower, both sides) the saturated Q-Tip will release its payload of Dentahex, and the rinse should spread through the mouth evenly. And as long as you've managed to get the Q-Tip in there anyhow, seize the moment and GENTLY move it back and forth along the animal's gums, even if only for a second or two.I know this isn't easy for most of us. It wasn't easy for me. I've had lots of cats over the years, and not one of them took medication gladly. The technique I've described above made it at least POSSIBLE for me to do the right thing for this cat. (And it still wasn't easy.) But if you love your animal(s), the alternative -- just bailing and saying, "This is too much for me!" -- is something to strongly resist. Poor oral health promotes a pro-inflammatory state throughout the body, for all animals including us. Your dog or cat can't tell you, "Hey, I feel lousy." But take it on faith that if you don't look after their oral health conscientiously ... and their gums get really bad ... lousy and sick is exactly how they'll feel.Final thought: I have to do this all by myself, seated in a wheelchair. If you can rustle up a volunteer in your home, and the two of you simply double-team the dog or cat, while standing up ... then in my book you're out of excuses.
H**1
My Recommendation: DON'T. Do Not Buy.
This product (Vetoqunol Dentahex) is listed as "unflavored" - which is a bald-faced lie, and false advertising. It is as minty in smell and flavor, as it is in color; it gives very strong menthol. So much so, that I could taste it on My tongue just from smelling it. The moment I just BEGAN to apply it to My cat's gumline - she bolted. Took off like a bullet, and immediately started smacking loudly and incessantly, as well as foaming and drooling at the mouth, and pawing at her face and head. She was traumatized, and kept running from and dodging Me for a full 10 minutes, afterward. It took her 20 or so, to finally calm back to normal.I find it stupid, btw, and a disservice to consumers - that it is against the guidelines now, to include info in a review about your experience with a seller, and packaging. ALL of that is DIRECTLY relevant to the buyer's experience, and it makes sense to have it all in one place. But of course, that doesn't serve corporate interests. It's disgusting how they try to frame it like these new rules are for consumers' sake. Another false advertisement.
D**S
A little too much
Not crazy about how the rinse comes out. Should be advertised as to drop into the pits water bowl.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 day ago