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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Melatonin effects on estrogen receptors in Pomeranian dogs

By Frank, Linda A et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2006·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Oestrogen receptor evaluation in Pomeranian dogs with hair cycle arrest (alopecia X) on melatonin supplementation.

Species:
dog
Skin & coatDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 15 Pomeranian dogs with hair loss due to hair cycle arrest (alopecia X) were treated with melatonin for three months to see if it would help them regrow their hair. After the treatment, about 40% of the dogs showed some hair regrowth, and biopsies indicated an increase in new hair growth. However, the study found that the hair regrowth did not seem to be linked to changes in certain hormone receptors in the skin. Overall, melatonin appeared to help some dogs regain their hair, but the exact mechanism remains unclear.

People also search for: Pomeranian hair loss treatment · alopecia X in dogs · melatonin for dog hair regrowth

Abstract

The role of oestrogen receptors in dogs with hair cycle arrest (alopecia X) was investigated by immunohistochemistry. The purpose of this study was to determine if hair regrowth in dogs with hair cycle arrest treated with melatonin was associated with a decrease in follicular oestrogen receptors. Fifteen Pomeranians (excluding intact females) with hair cycle arrest were enrolled. Two biopsies were obtained from alopecic areas of the trunk before and after 3 months on melatonin. Haematoxylin and eosin-stained tissues were examined and oestrogen receptor-alpha was demonstrated immunohistochemically. Common histopathological findings included hyperkeratosis, follicular keratosis, excessive tricholemmal keratinization (flame follicles), thin epidermis, few small anagen bulbs, epidermal pigmentation and melanin aggregates within follicular keratin. Melanin aggregates within basal cells and hair were an occasional finding. After 3 months, 40% (six) dogs had mild to moderate hair regrowth. Biopsies from six dogs showed histological evidence of an increase in anagen hairs and eight dogs had a decrease in epidermal pigmentation. Moderate to marked staining intensity of oestrogen receptor-alpha was noted in all sebaceous gland basal cells, all small hair bulbs and follicular epithelium of telogen hairs. There was no oestrogen receptor-alpha staining of nuclei within the epidermis, apocrine glands or dermal fibroblasts. Large anagen hair bulbs had minimal to no oestrogen receptor staining. Hair regrowth was not associated with a change in oestrogen receptor-alpha staining.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16827668/