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Jumat, 22 April 2016

How to Deal With Itchy Skin in Dogs

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Killing fleas, airing and brushing the coat, and getting rid of the dirt, dander and pollen on your dog, are all key to keeping your dogs skin healthy and happy.

Veterinarian Marty Becker details the newest thinking about dogs with chronic itchy skin:

Many dogs with itchy skin and recurrent bacterial infections have a weakness in their skin known as a "barrier defect.  In normal dogs, the skins barrier keeps water inside the body and substances like bacteria, yeast and pollens out. In dogs with a barrier defect, those substances "leak" into the deeper layers of the skin. Because the body perceives them as invaders, the immune system revs itself up to destroy them, bringing local inflammation to the area as part of the immune response....

The good news is that there’s a solution to this problem. The even better news is that it’s not costly, and the side effects are few to none."

Becker goes on to note that the solution, or recommended course of treatment, is weekly or even daily baths and topical treatment.

I have noted in the past that weekly baths are key to terrier coat health -- the opposite of what many show dog folks will tell you.

I have had terriers for 45 years and, with one or two small and very short-lived exceptions, I have never had a dog with itchy skin.

Why is that? 

I chalk it up to two simple factors:

  1. I prefer mutts, cross-breeds, and unregistered dogs. 
    One of the main reasons we have a lot of skin problems in dogs, and especially terriers, is that most show dogs are heavily inbred and, as a consequence, they have weak immune systems and more allergies.

  2. I wash my dogs every week. 
    I have always washed my dogs once a week, and you should too.  You have heard that washing your dog is "bad" for the dog?  Nonsense.  A dog wants to be clean and it deserves to be clean. You wash yourself at least once a week, right?  Do the same for the dog.  If you are worried about keeping your dogs coat shiny for shows, please grow up and get a life.  A dog does not want a ribbon -- its want to be free of itch.

So why do dogs get itchy skin? 

Theres a lot of veterinary mumbo jumbo on that score, but lets cut to the chase and lump up the three factors:

  1. Weak immune system and auto-immune disorders. 
    Dogs can get allergic to pollen and even to their own dandruff, which is one reason you want to wash your dog -- to reduce pollen and dander as well as dirt. Yes, some dogs have food allergies, but this is much less common than most people think, and the most common diet-based allergy in dogs is not to corn or wheat, but to beef.  If your dog has seasonal hotspots, it is almost certainly not due to a food allergy, but to a reaction to pollen, dander, and fleas.

  2. Allergies to fleas, mites, ticks, and mosquitoes. 
    Flea bite dermititis is common, and it only takes one or two fleas for a dog with a weak immune system to go a little nuts.  One reason to wash your dog with flea shampoo once a week in spring, summer and fall, is to make sure your dog harbors few or no fleas, mites, or ticks.
  3. Dogs have too much hair these days.
    Air circulation over the coat and the skin helps cut down on fungus infections. When thick hair is combined with poor hygiene (too little bathing and too little combing), the ground is set for canine skin trouble.  Again, washing your dog and combing out the under-thatch at least once a week will solve a lot of problems.

Do you need a special shampoo to wash your dog? 

No. 

The folks who claim otherwise are marketing nonsense or repeating old wives tales.  If a shampoo is gentle enough to be used on a human head once a day, its fine for a dog once a week!

In cold-weather months, when fleas and ticks are not much of an issue, use the cheapest shampoo you can find at the grocery store.  I get Suave at about $1 a bottle, and it works fine.  Expensive non-medicated dog shampoos are all hype and marketing.  Save your money.

In summer, I use an off-the-shelf pyrethrin-based flea and tick shampoo ($4.00 a bottle on the Internet and $7 at the store), and I make sure to lather well around the ears and neck, and around the dogs vent area. 

Pyrethrin is a very safe, old, and natural insecticide made from Chrysanthemum flowers, and pyrethrin-based shampoos are famously effective at killing fleas and ticks. In doses too small to kill fleas and ticks, pyrethrin repels them, and the the active ingredient is biodegradable as well.  The US Department of Agriculture says pyrethrins are "probably the safest of all insecticides" and has approved their use around foodstuffs and at food plants. 

Killing fleas, airing and brushing the coat, and getting rid of the dirt, dander and pollen on your dog, are all key to keeping your dogs skin healthy and happy.

Do you already have a dog with itchy skin, aka a "hot spot"?

If its a seasonal hot spot, as is so often the case, then it almost certainly has nothing to do with a food allergy, and is more likely to be due to pollen, dander and (especially) fleas. 

Wash your dog, treat for fleas, and knock down the initial itchiness with a dose of benadryl (2 mg or less per pound), and things should sort themselves out fairly quickly.

After the fleas are gone from the dog, and eliminated from its bedding as well, I generally recommend washing dogs that have skin problems with a human dandruff shampoo like Selsun Blue

If the seasonal hot spot problem continues (probably due to pollen) the dog should also get dosed with benadryl (up to to 2 mg per pound of dog, every 12 hours) to reduce itching.  Remember:  people take benadryl for their allergies all the time, and dogs can take it too if it is administered in the proper dose (not for cats!).  For terriers, the 25 mg. benadryl caplets sold at Walgreens as a "sleep aid" for humans are just about perfect.

Of course not all "hot spots" can be eliminated with a good shampooing alone.  There is a chance your dog might have a fungal skin infection, aka, "ring worm."

The cheap over-the-counter remedy here is to treat the red or balding areas with a topic fungal ointment like Tenactin or its generic equivalent. Rub it into the root of the hair and the skin. This ointment is the same ointment used to treat athletes foot and jock itch, and is sold at any pharmacy or grocery store for about $7 a tube.

Another step that may be necessary, especially if the dog has already rubbed the skin raw, is to dose the dog with an antibiotic like cephalexin (sold without prescription as "Fishflex") until the skin heals up.  A 7-day course of antibiotics will help the dog "attack the attacker" from the inside, as well as the outside.

If you suspect mange, wash the dog and bedding with a pythrethin-shampoo, and dose the dog at the mange site with a dilute (.05 percent) solution of Ivermectin as well. 
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Senin, 11 April 2016

How to Bring Out the Best in Your Dog

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By Langley Cornwell

What? Your dog is perfect? Well then, move along. There’s nothing for you to learn here. But if you’re like me, there are things we could do to make our dogs happier and our lives easier. It’s a simple concept, really. It all starts with determining what “type” of dog you have and then tailoring your activities to suit them.

Dogs generally fall into broad categories like couch potato, exercise nut, curious intellectual and loner. By accommodating their natural tendencies, you will bring out the best in your dog.

Couch Potato

Our newest dog is a complete couch potato; his idea of a good time is snuggling on the sofa all day. Because of this, I don’t expect him to be the outstanding athlete that our (loner) other dog is. Even so, we know it’s important to make sure he gets some sort of daily exercise and mental stimulation, but we don’t push him to run laps around the ball field. When we’re settled in for the evening, if we make sure there’s plenty of space on the couch for him to be near one of us, he’s happy. With regular, low stress walks and loads of personal interaction, we’re bringing out the best in this dog.

Loner

Our other dog definitely falls into the category of being a loner. When we’re all snuggled on the couch, she’s either at the far end, with plenty of personal space, or she’s on a bed in another room. She’s a happy dog and we interact with her a good bit, but when it’s quiet time, she wants to be left alone. According to Modern Dog Magazine, loner-type dogs do well with activities that reinforce a solid and dependable relationship with you.

These dogs like predictable routines they can rely on. If you have a loner, you’ll bring out the best in her if you establish daily training sessions that include plenty of praise and rewards. To foster a closer bond with a loner, you may try hand feeding her with a nutritious, high quality dog food like CANIDAE Grain Free PURE elements.

Exercise Nut

Some dogs must have an all-out workout every day or they simply cannot relax. If this is the case with your dog, develop some activities that you can do together to make sure he gets adequate physical exercise. Take care, however, that you don’t allow your dog to develop so much that he turns into an exercise junkie who needs more exertion than you can offer.

Just make sure you don’t over train your dog unless you’re interested in agility training or disc training. If you have an exercise nut, you’ll bring out the best in him if you provide adequate workouts, but it’s also very important to teach this type of dog how to relax.  

Curious Intellectual

You’ve heard of the dogs that can open the most intricate latches and pry off the lid of double locked trash cans. If you have an intellectual dog, they need to have a good, regular mental workout or they could turn their smarts into destructive behavior. More complex training exercises like tracking, herding or even the cognitively demanding Treibball will satisfy the intellectual dog. Along with brain-stimulating activities, curious intellectual-type dogs should get proper daily physical exercise as well.

Does your dog fall into any of these categories? Or maybe your dog is a mix of several; our loner has exercise nut tendencies. Tell us about your dog, and what you do to bring out the best in him or her.

Top photo by AnnieCatBlue
Bottom photo by Dan Bennett

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Selasa, 22 Maret 2016

Best in Show at the Republican Dog Show

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