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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Signs and details of nonseasonal atopic dermatitis in 63 dogs

By Bergvall, K. E. et al.·Published in Veterinary Dermatology·2002·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Demographics and clinical picture of nonseasonal canine atopic dermatitis – observations in 63 dogs

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 63 dogs with nonseasonal atopic dermatitis (a skin allergy) was studied to understand their symptoms and characteristics. Many of these dogs, especially German Shepherds, showed signs of skin issues before they turned one year old. Common symptoms included redness, hair loss, and skin irritation, particularly on their feet, ears, and groin. The findings suggest that young dogs can develop skin allergies earlier than previously thought, and the types of skin lesions can vary based on the dog's breed or specific allergens.

People also search for: dog skin allergies symptoms · German Shepherd skin problems · nonseasonal atopic dermatitis treatment

Abstract

The objectives of this multicentre study were to describe demographics and clinical findings of a group of 63 dogs with nonseasonal atopic dermatitis (AD), where concurrent flea allergy dermatitis, ectoparasite infestation, food adverse reactions and secondary infections had been ruled out. The breed, sex, age of onset, distribution of skin lesions, prevalence of otitis externa, secondary skin infections and additional noncutaneous clinical signs were recorded. A veterinarian recorded skin lesions from 15 different body regions. Each body region was scored according to degree of erythema, alopecia, excoriations, scale, crusts, lichenification and hyperpigmentation that was present. An early age of onset (37% of the dogs being less than 1 year old) was more common in this group of dogs than described in the literature. The German shepherd breed was over‐represented (21% as compared with 7–9.9% of the veterinary clinic population) and approximately half of the German shepherd dogs (46%) started showing clinical signs before 1 year of age. Erythema was the overall most common type of skin lesion, with facial erythema and conjunctivitis being less commonly reported than in other studies. Feet, ears and groin were the most common sites for skin lesions. This study indicates that it is not uncommon for dogs with nonseasonal AD to have the onset of clinical signs start at a younger age (less than 1 year of age) and have clinical lesions that vary from previously published reports. This discrepancy might be allergen‐dependent or breed‐related. The study was funded by Boehringer Ingelheim Vetmedica, Denmark.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-3164.2002.00298_1.x