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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New amino acid and potato diet helps dogs with itchy skin dermatitis

By Kawarai, Shinpei et al.·Published in The Journal of veterinary medical science·2010·First Department of Veterinary Microbiology, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical efficacy of a novel elimination diet composed of a mixture of amino acids and potatoes in dogs with non-seasonal pruritic dermatitis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 20 dogs with itchy skin (non-seasonal pruritic dermatitis) tried a new elimination diet made of amino acids and potatoes to see if it would help identify food allergies. After two months, 15 dogs finished the trial, and 11 of them showed improvement in their symptoms. When these dogs were later given foods like pork, beef, chicken, and wheat, 7 of them had their skin problems return, confirming they had food allergies. This new diet proved helpful in diagnosing food-related skin issues in dogs.

People also search for: dog itchy skin treatment · food allergies in dogs · elimination diet for dog dermatitis

Abstract

There has been a need for improvement of the elimination diet used for diagnosis of adverse food reaction (AFR) in dogs. Recently, a novel elimination diet composed of a mixture of amino acids and potatoes was developed. We evaluated the efficacy of the elimination diet for diagnosis of AFR in dogs. Twenty dogs that were suspected to have allergic dermatitis were enrolled in a 2-month food elimination trial using the diet. Before and after the trial, the clinical symptoms were evaluated based on the change in canine atopic dermatitis extent and severity index (CADESI), pruritus score and medication score. Of the 20 dogs, 15 completed the food elimination trial. The remaining 5 dogs were removed from the trial because of diet unpalatability, skin disease progression or diarrhea. On the basis of evaluation of the clinical scores, we observed that the clinical symptoms improved in 11 of the 15 dogs that completed the food elimination trial. Provocative challenge was performed in 10 of the 11 dogs that showed improvement in their clinical symptoms. Of the 10 dogs, 7 were diagnosed as having AFR against food ingredients such as pork, beef, chicken and wheat because their skin symptoms reappeared after intake of these ingredients. The results of the food elimination trial and the provocative challenge indicated the usefulness of the novel elimination diet for diagnosis of AFR.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20587965/