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Question

2 OF MY 3 DOGS ARE ITCHING EXCESSIVELY AND LOSING HAIR, AND HAVE ANGRY, ROUGH, SCALY LOOKING SKING AT AND AROUND THE TARGET SITES. IT BEGAN WITH AN 11-YEAR OLD ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIEL WITH MILD THYROID ISSUES, BUT IS NOW AFFECTING A 7-YEAR OLD MINIATURE SCHNAUZER. A 5 YEAR OLD MINIATURE DACHSHUND DOESN'T HAVE ANY SIMILAR SIGNS OR SYMPTOMS. I LIVE IN THE COUNTRY AND DO NOT HAVE FLEAS. I HAVE HAD HORSES WITH SKIN IRRITATIONS APPARENTLY RELATED TO SOME VEGETATION. I CANNOT REALLY AFFORD A VET TRIP JUST NOW AND AM WONDERING WHAT I MIGHT TRY ON MY OWN. BETADINE SHAMPOOING?

Submitted: 18 days and 11 hours ago.
Category: Dog
Value: $9
Status: CLOSED
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Optional Information

Pet's Sex: Female
Pet's Age: 11

Already Tried:
bathing, brushing, aloe, benadryl spray

Accepted Answer

What you describe could be allergies but it might also be something such as mange mites which you can read about here

http://www.marvistavet.com/html/body_sarcoptic_mange.html

Or a skin infection with ringworm

http://www.marvistavet.com/html/body_ringworm.html (and some dogs can be immune to that and not show symptoms)

or a bacterial skin infection

http://www.e-doc.co.za/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=396

Paw licking, itching and skin chewing are often signs of allergies. You may see red staining to the fur in the licked areas or raw spots where the dog chews itself.

The skin itches from allergies, the dog licks and chews trying to soothe the itch, making the skin raw and allowing other infections to set in which may itch even more.

You can read about allergies and dermatitis in dogs here

http://www.lbah.com/allergy.htm

http://www.priory.com/vet/vetatop1.htm

Dogs can develop allergies to foods, even ones they eat all the time, and to inhaled items, and contact allergens such as rug cleaners, cedar beds, or chemicals including lawn chemicals or even flea bites.

You might want to try a different dog food that has no ingredients the same as what you feed now. Diets of Fish and Potato, venison, or rabbit etc. where the protein source is new and there are no grains in the food can work for many dogs for example. Another option is the hypoallergenic diet from your vet Hills ZD. Changing food does no good if you feed the same ingredients. Remember food changes have to include all treats and supplements. It can take 8-12 weeks or more before you see results in skin and coat.

If this is an inhalant allergy you may find using a HEPA air filter in the room the dog uses most and wiping the dog down with a damp towel when it comes in helps reduce allergen exposure.

You might want to see if some plain Benadryl helps with the itching. A common low dose is 1mg per pound of dog every 12 hours. Do check with your vet about using a med but this one or another may help him a lot. If you choose to use that please read here about cautions

http://www.petplace.com/drug-library/diphenhydramine-benadryl/page1.aspx

You may want to consult with your vet and consider doing allergy testing.

Or ask your vet about using Temaril-P to see if that works

http://www.pfizerah.com/Product_Overview.aspx?drug=TM&country=US&lang=EN&species=CN

You can try a Chlorhexiderm shampoo from the pet supply store in case the problem is a bacterial skin infection. Malaseb is another good one to eliminate yeast from the skin. Follow directions on the bottles if you try one.

Dogs can have low thyroid level issues and that can trigger skin allergies. The vet can check for that with a blood test.

If your dog is not on a flea prevention that might also help. Just one flea bite can make an allergic dog itch all over. If that is the problem then Frontline could resolve a lot of the reactions for you.

Some people find their dogs do better when they are given omega 3&6 fatty acid supplements such as Derm Caps or Linatone from the pet supply store.

If your regular vet is not able to help you then you may want to see a veterinary dermatologist and this page may help you locate one if your vet can't refer you to one

http://www.acvd.org/

Hope this helps you!

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Expert: NancyH
Pos. Feedback: 99.5 %
Accepts: 
Answered: 11/2/2009

Dog Expert:Rescue, Train,Breed,Care

30+ yrs dog home vet care & nursing, rescue, behavior&training, responsible show breeding, genetics

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