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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

What causes red skin spots that don't fade when pressed in dogs

By Forbes, Stephanie et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2024·AniCura Tier&#xe4, Germany·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Diascopy and histopathological evaluation of nonblanching erythematous dermatoses in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with severe red skin that didn't fade when pressed were examined to find out what was causing the problem. The dogs were diagnosed with various conditions, including skin diseases like eosinophilic dermatitis and lymphoma, as well as issues like pyoderma and leishmaniosis. Most of the dogs showed signs of bleeding under the skin, which was confirmed by lab tests. Treatments varied depending on the specific diagnosis, but understanding the underlying cause helped veterinarians provide appropriate care.

People also search for: dog skin redness causes · nonblanching erythema in dogs · treatment for dog eosinophilic dermatitis · dog lymphoma symptoms

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diascopy is a point-of-care diagnostic test used to differentiate skin erythema due to vascular dilation from haemorrhage. In the veterinary literature, only a handful of diseases have been described to be associated with a negative (nonblanching) diascopy result, and histological investigation of haemorrhage has been inconsistent. OBJECTIVES: Retrospective study to undertake a histopathological investigation of canine, nonblanching erythematous dermatoses for the presence or absence of haemorrhage and vascular changes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Skin biopsies from dogs presented with moderate-to-severe nonblanching erythema were evaluated histologically. Additionally, clinical data about each patient were analysed. RESULTS: Twenty cases were identified with nonblanching erythema. Diagnoses included vasculopathy (n = 6), canine eosinophilic dermatitis (n = 3), cutaneous epitheliotropic T-cell lymphoma (n = 2), and one case each of sterile granuloma and pyogranuloma syndrome, German shepherd dog pyoderma, multiple mast cell tumours, haemangiosarcoma, exfoliative cutaneous lupus erythematosus, canine leishmaniosis with sebaceous adenitis, sebaceous adenitis with concurrent dermatophytosis, calcinosis cutis and canine atopic dermatitis with insect-bite reaction. One or more vascular changes were present in all 20 cases and included perivascular oedema, endothelial swelling and neutrophilic infiltration of vessel walls. Haemorrhage was identified in 17 of 20 cases (85%). Three cases without dermal haemorrhage were calcinosis cutis, sebaceous adenitis with dermatophytosis and canine atopic dermatitis with insect-bite reaction. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Negative diascopy was associated with haemorrhage and vascular pathological findings in the majority of cases, yet not all. Haemorrhage was identified histologically in all diseases previously reported as nonblanching as well as in a few additional diseases.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38111018/