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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Noninfectious patchy hair loss in Norwegian puffin dogs

By Bergvall, Kerstin E & Shokrai, Arman·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2014·Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Husbandry·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical and histological characterization of multifocal, spontaneous, noninfectious alopecia in Norwegian puffin dogs (lundehunds).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of Norwegian puffin dogs, aged between 8 months and 7 years, were found to have a skin condition causing hair loss, known as multifocal alopecia. Symptoms included dry skin, slight scaling, and itching, but the hair loss was not extensive. While some dogs experienced temporary relief from itching with oral prednisolone, the most effective treatment was ciclosporin, which helped all treated dogs achieve remission. Unfortunately, spontaneous recovery was rare, and the condition could worsen during a female dog's heat cycle.

People also search for: Norwegian puffin dog hair loss treatment · dog itching and hair loss · ciclosporin for dog skin problems

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A noninfectious, spontaneous, multifocal alopecia has been recognized in Norwegian puffin dogs. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to report demographic information, history, clinical signs, histopathological features and follow-up information for alopecic Norwegian puffin dogs from Sweden. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A questionnaire was sent out to all members of the breed association. Dogs clinically diagnosed with alopecia and biopsied were allocated to Group A. Dogs reported with alopecia for which histopathology was not available were allocated to Group B. RESULTS: Group A included 14 dogs (11.7% of the breed population in Sweden). Information regarding 72 dogs (60% of the breed population) was collected via questionnaire, and alopecia without histopathology was reported in another five dogs (Group B). Gender distribution was equal. Median age of onset was 1.5 years (range 8 months to 7 years). Multifocal or serpiginous alopecia, follicular plugging, dry skin, slight scaling and pruritus were characteristic. Extensive, widespread alopecia was not seen, and lesions were recorded only in haired skin. A lymphoplasmacytic, mural, isthmus folliculitis/perifolliculitis with follicular and perifollicular mucin was observed. Inflammation did not involve the hair bulb; atrophy was sometimes present. The inflammation sometimes extended to sebaceous glands, resulting in atrophy and absence of glands. Follow-up ranged from 6 months to 12 years (mean 3.2 years). Spontaneous remission was rare. Estrus was associated with worsening of the disease or relapse. Oral prednisolone reduced pruritus but was not effective in resolving clinical lesions. All dogs treated with ciclosporin went into remission. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: This is the first report of mural, mucinotic, isthmus folliculitis alopecia in Norwegian puffin dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24666661/