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Kelly the giraffe preparing to return to her feet after having her mouth examined by vets and staff at Blair Drummond safari park.
Kelly the giraffe preparing to return to her feet after having her mouth examined by vets and staff at Blair Drummond safari park. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA
Kelly the giraffe preparing to return to her feet after having her mouth examined by vets and staff at Blair Drummond safari park. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA

Kelly the giraffe gets high-level dental treatment

This article is more than 9 years old

Vets and staff at Blair Drummond safari park gave Kelly, a 14-year-old giraffe, a general anaesthetic and x-ray to check her teeth

A giraffe that was struggling to chew its food has been given some dental work by a team of vets at a safari park.

Kelly, a 14-year-old giraffe, needed a general anaesthetic to allow experts to have a look inside her mouth to check her teeth.

The move came after keepers at Blair Drummond safari park near Stirling noticed the animal was not digesting her food thoroughly and it was suspected she might have a problem with one of her molars.

A team of around 12 vets and staff worked on the animal in the section of the park she shares with four other female giraffes.

Vets and safari park staff examining the 14-year-old giraffe’s mouth. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA

She was constantly monitored throughout the 30-minute procedure, in which an x-ray of her mouth was also taken to explore if there were any further problems with her teeth.

Using a ladder and bales of straw to prop up her long neck, veterinary surgeon Ian Rodger was able to look in her mouth where he found food being caught in a gap.

A decision was made to take x-rays of her mouth to look more closely at whether further drilling work would be required to widen the gap to avoid food continuing to be trapped there.

Staff take an x-ray of the giraffe’s jaw. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA

Rodger said: “Although the changes don’t look enormous to my eye – I’ve certainly seen worse changes than that in horses’ mouths many times – gum inflammation or gum recession is a noted source of pain in an animal’s mouth, so that may well be the primary source of the problem.

“We don’t undertake general anaesthesia in a giraffe lightly but this is a problem that’s been working away for a wee while now and we felt we had no choice but to explore the mouth, and hopefully based on that and based on the x-ray, we can make some decisions as to how to put a treatment programme in place.”

Ailsa West, team leader for giraffes at the safari park, said: “I and the other giraffe keepers have all been a little bit nervous about this morning, especially when you see the drug starting to take effect, but it’s so good to see her back up on her feet so quickly.”

Staff at the safari park, which opens for the season on Saturday, monitored Kelly throughout Tuesday before she was slowly mixed back together with the other giraffes.

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