Monday, October 31, 2011

Atopy - Airborne Allergies in Pets - Dr. Lewis


Airborne Allergies or Atopy


Just as airborne allergy is common in people; it is also common in dogs and cats. Common allergens are pollens, dander, grasses, trees, and fabrics; any airborne particle can potentially become an allergen. 

Features of Atopic Dermatitis
  • Atopy usually produces a seasonal itchiness though after several years, the duration of the itchy period extends. Finally, the pet is itchy nearly all year round.

    Seasonal itchiness due to atopy tends to begin early in a pet's life (between ages 1 and 3). Flea allergic dermatitis, the other prime cause of seasonal itchiness, tends to begin later (between ages 3 and 5).
     
  • Itchiness due to atopy responds rapidly to cortisone-type medications (prednisone, depomedrol, dexamethasone, azium etc.)
     
  • Atopy is associated with irritation in certain parts of the body. In dogs, these areas are the feet, armpits and belly, under the tail, and around the eyes and muzzle. In cats, the allergic pattern may be facial, may be reflected as hair loss, or may show as a rash of tiny seed-like scabs (called miliary dermatitis) in various areas of the body. They also may overgroom large sections of their body until they are bald.


What to do for Atopic Dermatitis?

Prednisone (and other related steroids)
These cortisone-type medications tend to be useful as the first line of defense against itchy skin. A higher dose is used at first but this is quickly tapered down once the condition is controlled. Prednisone is given every other day so as to allow the pet one day of recovery from the prednisone's hormonal actions. An atopic dog will respond within days. For cats, long-acting cortisone-type injections are more frequently used as cats are often a challenge when administering pills.

Problems arise when the pet's need for itch control demands excessive use of prednisone. Prednisone is a hormone, affecting all body symptoms. Side effects include:  excess thirst, excess appetite, urinary incontinence, muscle breakdown, immune suppression, termination of pregnancy, inflammation of the pancreas, lethargy/panting If your pet has an unacceptable side effect, you should consider trying alternative therapy for itchy skin.
If your dog is on every other day prednisone often throughout the year, you should consider one of the following: alternative therapy, further diagnostics (There may be a more specific treatment for your pet), referral to a specialist, or continued steroid use but with monitoring tests (annual blood panel, re-check exam, and urine checks 3 to 4 times a year) 

Cats are more resistant to the negative effects of steroid hormones thus they are able to take long acting injections as frequently as every three months. If a cat seems to require an injection every other month, efforts should be made to seek an alternative form of management due to the increased risk of diabetes.

Alternatives to Steroids
There are many alternatives to prednisone; unfortunately, none produce as reliable a response.

Antihistamines - These are far less harmful than prednisone but only 10% to 20% of dogs will respond to any given antihistamine. Our hospital uses a testing protocol using four antihistamines, showing benefit to approximately 30% of the dogs who try it. Animals that cannot get by on antihistamines may be able to lower their prednisone requirement when using antihistamines together with prednisone. It should be noted that antihistamines are far more effective in cats than in dogs. Reliable itch control is frequently obtained but the down side is that the cat in question must take medication twice a day, potentially indefinitely. 


Fatty Acid Supplements - These products are NOT analogous to adding oil to the pet's food. Instead, these special fatty acids act as medications, disrupting the production of inflammatory chemicals within the skin. They are often used in conjunction with antihistamines. 

Cyclosporine [Atopica®]) - This is a fairly recent product for dogs (not approved for cats but sometimes used in cats). It is a pill shown to be as effective as prednisone for the treatment of atopic dermatitis. This product, which modulates the abnormal immune reaction in atopy, has been a true breakthrough in reducing the need for steroids. It is a relatively expensive medication compared with steroids but does not lead to long term debilitating side effects as steroids can. 

Hyposensitization?

Just as people have allergy shots, so can pets; however, the process is not without difficulty and one should not expect hyposensitization to end all itchy skin concerns.
  • Allergy shots require approximately 6 to 12 months to begin working.
  • 25% of atopic dogs will not respond (these are usually the animals allergic to multiple allergens.)
  • 25% will require prednisone at least at some times.
  • You will have to give the allergy shots yourself.


Is Your Pet a Candidate?
Testing is best done during your pet's non-itchy season (if there is one) so that the skin responses of the test will not be clouded by active inflammation. The test involves injections of small amounts of allergen extracts into the skin. Reactions noted are compared to reactions produced by two controls: pure histamine (very inflammatory) and pure saline (very non-inflammatory).
In order to take the test the following medication withholding scheduled should be followed. Your dog may not have had:
  • Depomedrol injections within 8 weeks
  • Vetalog injections within 6 weeks
  • Antihistamines within 1 week
  • Topical steroids (such as panalog) for 1 week
  • Oral steroids (such as prednisone) for 4 weeks
Guidelines for cats are generally stricter. Check with a specialist for their recommendations. 

These requirements come from one board certified dermatologist; other veterinary dermatologists may have other requirements. It is often useful to have ruled out food allergy with an elimination diet trial prior to the skin test as food allergy/intolerance responds much more rapidly to diet correction than atopy does to hyposensitization. Food allergy and atopic dermatitis both present a similar distribution of itchiness and can be difficult to distinguish. 

Allergic skin testing is generally performed only by specialists. 

You May Hear about Blood Testing

As an alternative to skin testing, several blood tests have been developed to check for the presence of allergy-type antibodies in the blood. These tests can be submitted by any veterinarian (no specialist need be involved) and drugs need not be withheld prior to testing (though the test may not be valid for animals that have had hyposensitization in the past). This type of testing is fraught with controversy. It appears that the results of such tests do not correlate well with the results of skin testing (our traditional test). It is difficult to say how this kind of testing will ultimately fit in to the treatment of atopic dermatitis but seems best at this time for animals suspected of having inhalant allergies who simply cannot go without medication, who have negative skin testing, or for whom skin testing is unavailable due to other reasons.

Itch Relief



Topicals to Try
When using any dip on inflamed skin one should be aware that the use of cool water is considered much more soothing than warm water.  Dips, soaks, shampoos, and ointments may also be a helpful addition to one's anti-itch armament. The disadvantage is that these products must be applied or utilized often. 


Topical Steroids? - It seems clear that taking steroids orally may be harmful to the body with chronic use but are topical creams safe for long term use? We now know that topical steroids (cortisone creams and related products) are absorbed through the skin and into the bloodstream but the hormonal side effects with topical use do seem blunted. For small irritated areas (hot spots), topicals can provide excellent relief without the systemic effects of hormones.  Excessive application and licking of topical steroids will have the same harmful effects as oral steroids however.

Colloidal Oatmeal Shampoos and Cream Rinse - At first, these products were only available for human use, as powdered soaks to pour into bath water.  Once their value in itch management was determined, their use quickly spread to the veterinary field. Colloidal oatmeal actually pulls inflammatory toxins out of the skin, generally yielding 1 to 3 days of relief. The cream rinses are meant to yield longer acting relief. They are available plain or combined with local anesthetic formulas to soothe itch.

Lime Sulfur Dip - This product kills parasites, ringworm fungi, and bacteria.  It also dries moist, weeping skin lesions and helps dissolve surface skin proteins that are involved in itchiness. Many veterinary dermatologists recommend it regularly to control itch; however, it has several disadvantages. It smells terrible.  The sulfur ingredient smells like rotten eggs and this is how your bathroom or bathing area will smell during the pet's bath. This dip can stain jewelry, metal bathroom fixtures, clothing, and will temporarily turn white fur yellow. 


Other Shampoos
Itchy skin can be the result of skin infection, excess oil accumulation, yeast infection, even parasitic infection. The list goes on. The shampoo products listed above can be used against any itchy skin disease but it should be noted that there are many other shampoo and cream rinse products that can be used against the specific skin diseases listed. If some other type of shampoo product has been prescribed to you for an itchy skin disease, it is important that you use it allowing at least a good 10 minutes of skin contact time before rinsing. 


TEN MINUTES OF SKIN CONTACT IS THE MINIMUM REQUIREMENT FOR ANY MEDICATED SHAMPOO. PREMATURE RINSING WILL NOT ALLOW FOR THE THERAPEUTIC BENEFIT TO BE REALIZED. 







By: Dr. Dana Lewis
Dr. Dana assists families with Pet Hospice and Euthanasia in the Raleigh North Carolina area (Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill and the greater Triangle, as well as Wake, Durham, Orange, and Chatham counties.)

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