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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Skin problems in cats that signal other health issues

By Vogelnest, Linda J·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2017·Small Animal Specialist Hospital, Australia·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Skin as a marker of general feline health: Cutaneous manifestations of systemic disease.

Species:
cat
Skin & coatCats

Plain-English summary

A cat with skin problems, like hair loss, scaling, or red patches, might actually be showing signs of a more serious health issue. While many skin issues are just that—skin problems—sometimes they can indicate underlying systemic diseases, especially in older or sickly cats. If your cat has severe skin lesions or other signs of illness, it’s important to have them checked out by a vet, who may recommend tests to find out if there’s a bigger issue at play. Early detection can lead to better treatment outcomes.

People also search for: cat skin problems · why is my cat losing hair · cat skin lesions treatment · cat systemic disease signs · cat itching and red skin

Abstract

Practical relevance: Although most skin lesions occur due to diseases primarily affecting the skin, some reflect important systemic diseases. Such lesions may relate directly to the systemic disease, or may occur due to secondary skin diseases that develop because of immunosuppression. Early recognition of skin changes as a marker of systemic disease will maximise patient outcomes. Clinical challenges: In older or clearly debilitated cats presenting with skin disease, the potential for underlying systemic disease is often readily apparent. Similarly, cats presenting with severe ulcerative or multifocal nodular skin lesions, or with concurrent signs of systemic illness, will more instinctively prompt systemic evaluation. More challenging is the cat presenting with alopecic, scaling, erythemic and/or mildly crusted skin disease, with or without pruritus; hypersensitivities and infectious dermatoses are the most common considerations, but occasionally systemic disease underlies the skin changes. Knowing when screening laboratory testing, body imaging or other systemic diagnostics are indicated is not always straightforward. Evidence base: This article reviews cutaneous presentations of systemic diseases reported in the veterinary literature, and discusses important differential diagnoses. The author draws on clinical experience, published data on disease prevalence and case evaluations, and expert opinions on approach to common systemic problems to provide guidance on when investigation for underlying systemic disease is most appropriate.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28838298/