Mo’s Equine Dentistry

Mo’s Equine Dentistry 25+yrs providing the highest standard of dental care that genuinely makes a difference for you & your horse.

Always happy to help the horses !!!!
01/07/2026

Always happy to help the horses !!!!

01/07/2026
12/30/2025

It's a lovely day with 70-degree weather, perfect for attending to barrel horses.

12/29/2025

My horses are loving the sunshine !!!!

12/21/2025

Who knows the correct answer? Comment your guess?

12/21/2025
12/21/2025

🎅 Santa came early for Maryland Horse Rescue!
We teamed up with Myles Hopton, EqDt - Pegasus Equine Services today to provide much-needed dental care to some deserving rescue horses. Teamwork makes a difference—especially this time of year 🐴✨

Good explanation!!!
12/19/2025

Good explanation!!!

In equine dentistry, three-point balance refers to the principle of balancing the horse’s mouth so that chewing, comfort, and performance are optimized. It’s a functional goal during dental equilibration (floating/adjusting the teeth), ensuring that pressure is distributed evenly and that the horse can move its jaw properly.🤠

1. The Three Points

The “three points” of balance are:
• Incisors (front teeth) – They determine how far forward and back the jaw can move. They are ised to nip grass.
• Premolars and molars (cheek teeth, back teeth) – They do the bulk of grinding and mastication initial feed breakdown .
• Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) – The jaw joint that coordinates the movement of the mouth and and absorbs stress.

2. Purpose

If any one of these areas is out of alignment (e.g., overgrown incisors preventing full lateral excursion, sharp enamel points on molars, or uneven pressure stressing the TMJ), the horse can’t chew efficiently or comfortably. This can lead to:
• Abnormal wear
• Difficulty eating
• Training and performance issues (resistance, head tossing, bit discomfort)
• Secondary problems in the neck, back, or overall biomechanics

3. Goal of Three-Point Balance

The dentist or practitioner aims to:
• Balance the incisors so the jaw can move forward, backward, and sideways without restriction.
• Balance the cheek teeth so pressure is even along the arcade and grinding is efficient.
• Ensure the TMJ is not stressed, keeping the horse’s jaw alignment comfortable and functional.

When all three points are in harmony, the horse achieves “three-point balance”—a state where dental anatomy supports natural chewing, digestion, and comfort.

CAEDP…….

Address

280 Knorr Road
Gettysburg, PA
17325

Telephone

+19407279257

Website

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