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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Tea tree oil cream helps itchy skin dermatitis in dogs

By Reichling, J et al.·Published in DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift·2004·Inst. Pharmazie und Molekulare Biotechnologie·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Topical tea tree oil effective in canine localised pruritic dermatitis--a multi-centre randomised double-blind controlled clinical trial in the veterinary practice.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 57 dogs with itchy skin and various types of dermatitis were treated with either a tea tree oil cream or a standard skin care cream. After 10 days, the dogs using the tea tree oil cream showed a 71% success rate in relieving symptoms like itching and hair loss, compared to only 41% for the control cream. The tea tree oil cream not only worked faster but was also found to be safe, with very few side effects reported. This suggests that tea tree oil could be an effective and quick option for treating localized skin issues in dogs.

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Abstract

Tea tree oil, a volatile oil, is well known for its broad antibacterial and antifungal activity. A standardised and stabilised 10% tea tree oil cream was tested against a commercial skin care cream (control cream) in the management of canine localised acute and chronic dermatitis. Fifty-seven dogs with clinical manifestations of mostly pruritic skin lesions or alterations, skin fold pyodermas and other forms of dermatitis, corroborated by predominantly positive fungal and bacterial skin isolates, were enrolled by seven practising veterinarians and randomly allocated to two study groups (28:29) and were treated twice daily with a blinded topical preparation. After 10 days of treatment, success rates of 71% for the tea tree oil cream and 41% for the control cream (over-all efficacy documented by the veterinary investigator) differed significantly (p = 0.04), favouring tea tree oil cream treatment. Accordingly on day 10, the tea tree oil cream caused significantly faster relief than the control cream (p = 0.04) for two common clinical dermatitis signs, pruritus (occurring in 84 % of dogs) and alopecia. Only one adverse event was reported in the tea tree oil group (suspected not to be causally related to the study drug) and none in the control cream group. The tested herbal cream appears to be a fast-acting safe alternative to conventional therapy for symptomatic treatment of canine localised dermatitis with pruritus.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15568640/