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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

What causes and triggers dog atopic dermatitis and how it works

By Marsella, Rosanna·Published in Veterinary Dermatology·2021·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences College of Veterinary Medicine University of Florida 2015 SW 16th Avenue Gainesville FL 32610 USA, United States·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Advances in our understanding of canine atopic dermatitis

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with itchy skin and frequent scratching may be suffering from canine atopic dermatitis (cAD), a genetic skin condition influenced by both genetics and the environment. This condition leads to a weakened skin barrier, allowing allergens to penetrate and trigger an immune response. While researchers are exploring various immune factors and potential treatments, it's still unclear whether specific genetic mutations cause cAD in dogs, as they do in humans. Currently, treatments focus on managing symptoms and improving skin health, but more research is needed to identify effective, targeted therapies.

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Abstract

Canine atopic dermatitis (cAD) is a genetically inherited clinical syndrome that encompasses a diversity of mechanisms and can have a variety of triggers. Development of clinical disease is the result of genetic factors and environmental conditions, which shape the resulting immunological response.Clinical disease becomes evident once a threshold of inflammatory response is achieved. Skin barrier impairment plays a role in promoting cutaneous dysbiosis and increased allergen penetration. Keratinocytes shape the response of dendritic cells and subsequent lymphocytic response. Thymic stromal lymphopoietin is one of the links between the damaged skin barrier and the modulation of a T‐helper (Th)2 response. It is still unclear whether mutations in skin barrier genes exist in atopic dogs, as they do in humans, or whether the observed alterations are purely secondary to inflammation.A dysregulated immune response with increased Th2, Th17 and CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells has been reported. A variety of cytokines [interleukin(IL)‐31, IL‐34, Macrophage migration inhibitory factor] are proposed as potential biomarkers and treatment targets because they are increased in the serum of atopic dogs when compared to controls, although a correlation between serum levels of these factors and severity of disease is not always present.The main issue with many published studies is that atopic dogs are always only compared to normal controls. Thus, it is unclear whether the changes that we find are truly a signature of cAD or merely a manifestation of nonspecific broad inflammatory responses. Studies considering comparison with other inflammatory diseases different from cAD are urgently needed to correctly identify what is specific to this complicated syndrome.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/vde.12965