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Canine Allergies
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By Judy Tidwell


Your Dog May Have Allergies, Too

Dogs, like humans, can also suffer from allergies. Itching of the skin is the most
common symptom of a dog allergy. The respiratory tract can be affected causing
coughing, sneezing, and/or wheezing. At times, the eyes and nose may develop a
discharge. Also, the digestive system may be affected causing vomiting or diarrhea.

About 20 percent of the dogs in the United States suffers from some type of allergy,
whether it be atopic dermatitis, flea allergy, food allergy, inhalant allergy, contact
allergy, or bacterial allergy.

Atopic Dermatitis

An allergic skin disease of dogs, known as canine atopic dermatitis, is caused by the
dog's immune system hypersensitivity to common substances in the environment,
such as dust mites or molds.

The signs of atopic dermatitis usually appear within the first two years of a dog's life.
If the dog begins to groom excessively, with licking or chewing of the paws, abdomen,
and hind quarters, then it may suffer from atopic dermatitis. Also, check to see if the
ears are reddened and hot to the touch.
A hidden sign that a dog is atopic is in the armpits, groin, or between the toes of the
paws. Check to see if there is saliva staining. In light colored dogs, it appears as a
red-brown staining. In chronic cases the skin, mostly in the abdomen, may change
color from a pinkish, to angry red, to black mottling.

Flea allergy, food allergy, and parasitic infestations may mimic the symptoms of atopic
dermatitis making it difficult to diagnose. Once fleas, foods, and parasitic infestations
are eliminated as being the offending culprits, then allergy skin testing for dust mites,
pollens, and molds may be done to determine what causes the dog's atopic dermatitis.

Flea Allergy

The most common form of canine allergy is flea allergy dermatitis. The flea itself is not
the culprit in canine flea allergies. It is their saliva that causes the allergic reaction.

A skin allergy test can be preformed to determine if a dog is allergic to flea saliva. If it
is, then a strict flea control regimen is required to reduce symptoms. Caution must be
used however to make sure the chemicals in the flea preparations are not harmful to
the dog.

Inhalant Allergy

Just like humans, canine inhalant allergies are caused by pollens (tree, grass, and
weed), dust mites, molds, and chemicals.

Although any pure bred or mutt can acquire inhalant allergies, the most common
breeds that are affected include terriers (especially the West Highland white terrier,
Skye terrier, Scottish terrier and Boston terrier), golden retrievers, poodles,
dalmatians, German shepherds, Chinese Shar-peis, shih tzus, lhasa apsos, pugs, Irish
setters, and miniature schnauzers.

The symptoms of an inhalant allergy include scratching, biting, chewing at feet and
constant licking. The itching may be most severe on feet, flanks, groin, and armpits.

Inhalant allergies are often the reason for recurrent ear infections in your dog.

Food Allergy

Dogs can become allergic to a food they have eaten for years which causes many
people to over look the possibility of a food allergy.

Food allergies only account for 10 percent of allergy problems in dogs. Dogs often can
not tolerate soy products, wheat, corn, beef, pork, chicken, milk, whey, eggs, fish,
chemical preservatives, or artificial sugars in their food.

Determining the food allergen can be time consuming. First, eliminate all the possible
allergens from the diet, by using a home made diet consisting of a protein and a starch
the dog has not eaten before. Gradually add back, one at a time for a week, the
ingredients of the dog food. If symptoms return, then the offending food allergen
should be easily determined. Commercial dog foods can be found that do not contain
the offending allergen.

Food sensitivities in a dog may manifest as itchy skin, scratching at ears, shaking of
the head, licking and biting at the hind quarters or feet, rubbing faces on carpeting,
ear inflammations, coughing, and rarely vomiting, diarrhea, flatulence, sneezing,
asthma like symptoms, behavioral changes, seizures, gagging, and vomiting.

Contact Allergy

Contact allergy is the least common of all the types of dog allergies. Some of the
common contact allergens include flea collars, wood bedding, grass, plants, and
sometimes chemicals.

Bacterial Allergy

Several species of Staphylococcus (Staph) bacteria live on normal dog skin. Normally
Staph does not cause a problem with its host, but some dogs develop an allergy to it.

With this type of allergy the dog develops areas of hair loss that look much like ring
worm. These areas become infected and need to be treated with antibiotics. The
Staph allergic dog usually has recurrent Staph infections.
Mum, my ears itch - Do I have allergies?