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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Topical essential oil spray helps treat bacterial skin infections

By Bensignor, Emmanuel et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2016·Dermatology Referral Service, France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A split-body, randomized, blinded study to evaluate the efficacy of a topical spray composed of essential oils and essential fatty acids from plant extracts with antimicrobial properties.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 12 dogs with bacterial skin infections (pyoderma) were treated with an oral antibiotic and a special topical spray made from plant extracts. The spray was applied to one side of each dog's body while a placebo was used on the other side. Over four weeks, the dogs showed significant improvement on the side treated with the spray, with 100% of those areas healed by the end of the study, compared to much lower healing rates on the placebo side. This suggests that the topical spray can help speed up recovery from skin infections and may reduce the need for long-term antibiotic use.

People also search for: dog skin infection treatment · pyoderma in dogs · topical spray for dog skin problems

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bacterial pyoderma is a frequent presentation in dogs. Despite the widespread availability of effective systemic and topical antimicrobial products, good clinical practice currently recommends avoidance of long-term use to mitigate the development of bacterial resistance. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the speed of resolution of clinical signs of bacterial pyoderma in dogs treated with a systemic antimicrobial agent with or without the use of an adjunctive spray with antimicrobial properties. ANIMALS: Twelve dogs with superficial bacterial pyoderma. METHODS: In this controlled and blinded study, all dogs were treated with oral cefalexin and a topical spray (PYOClean Spray) for 4 weeks. The spray was applied to one half of each dog's body, whereas a placebo spray was applied to the other half. RESULTS: Twelve dogs completed the study. Mean clinical scores were significantly reduced on spray-treated sites, for test product and placebo (respectively), by 47% and 34% at Week 1, 83% and 60% at Week 2, 95% and 82% at Week 3, and 100% and 96% at Week 4. Fifty percent of treated sites were considered clinically and cytologically cured at Week 2, 83% at Week 3, and 100% at Week 4 compared to 8%, 50% and 83% for the placebo sites, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: These results demonstrate that use of a topical spray which contains plant-derived essential oils and fatty acids, and compounds with antimicrobial properties (Manuka oil and N-acetyl cysteine) may help to speed resolution of pyoderma and may allow for shorter antimicrobial treatment time.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27597636/