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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bacterial overgrowth causing itchy greasy skin in eight dogs

By Pin, D et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2006·Cabinet de Dermatologie V&#xe9, France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Prospective study of bacterial overgrowth syndrome in eight dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Eight dogs with skin problems, including severe itching, greasy skin, and a bad smell, were diagnosed with bacterial overgrowth syndrome caused by a type of bacteria called Staphylococcus intermedius. They were treated with an antibiotic called cephalexin for 28 days. After treatment, all the dogs showed improvement in their skin condition, although five of them also had underlying allergic skin issues that needed to be addressed. This suggests that while the antibiotic helped with the bacterial overgrowth, other skin allergies may still need attention.

People also search for: dog skin problems treatment · itchy dog greasy skin · cephalexin for dog skin infection

Abstract

Eight dogs with cutaneous lesions, clinical signs and cytological findings compatible with bacterial overgrowth syndrome were compared with four healthy dogs. The affected dogs were treated for 28 days with 30 mg/kg/day cephalexin. The results showed that the syndrome was a superficial cutaneous disorder characterised by marked pruritus, greasy seborrhoea, offensive odour, erythema, lichenification, hyperpigmentation, excoriations and alopecia involving principally the ventral aspect of the body, but no papules, pustules, epidermal collarettes or crusts; it was caused by overgrowths of Staphylococcus intermedius all over the body surface. Histopathological findings included a superficial, perivascular, hyperplastic and spongiotic dermatitis with a mixed inflammatory infiltrate, but no lesions suggestive of a true pyoderma. In the affected dogs, anti-staphylococcal immunoglobulin G levels were high, but anti-staphylococcal immunoglobulin E levels were low, suggesting that staphylococcal hypersensitivity is not the underlying pathogenic process. The antibiotic treatment improved the condition of all the dogs, but five of the eight had an underlying allergic skin disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16581994/