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Center-Sinai Animal Hospital
Serving the Los Angeles Community since 1969
10737 Venice Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 559-3770
Full
range of pet care and emergency veterinary services available

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Read below to find answers to a pet care question you and your
pet(s) may have.
For more Q&A's and articles, you might also want to check the
Ask Dr. B and
Info on Pet Conditions buttons -- for answers to pet care
questions from visitors, and a place to submit your own.
Click the "cat" for reading music.
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A
MITEY UNUSUAL CASE -- LESIONS ON COCKER SPANIEL'S FACE PERSISTENT
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Ch. Obo II, foundation sire
of the
American Cocker Spaniel. |
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As luck would have it, my best friend’s dog,
Kobe, presented with a common illness in a most unusual way. Kobe is
a nine year old English Cocker Spaniel. One day, before setting off
on a mountain bike ride, I was asked to look at some skin lesions
that had appeared on Kobe’s face. It was easy to see that Kobe had
developed a condition common in the spaniel breeds- a lip fold
pyoderma. Essentially, this condition is like a diaper rash with a
secondary infection that develops in the folds of the lips on the
sides of the lower jaw. Normally, good hygiene, in the form of
wiping the lip folds after eating and drinking, combined with oral
and topical antibiotics readily correct the situation. If that had
been the outcome, I would be telling you about some other case.
Kobe’s condition not only failed to respond to the treatment, but
over a period of two weeks got horribly worse. Large areas of the
face and neck developed large boils, severe swelling, and the skin
actually became necrotic and started sloughing off. Biopsy of the
skin lesions revealed a severe infection complicated by the presence
of Demodectic mange mites.
This particular type of mite is a normal inhabitant of the skin and
is not contagious to other dogs or to their masters. The vast
majority of cases of skin problems related to the mites are seen in
dogs under a year of age. Their proliferation, allowing them to
cause skin damage, is usually thought to result from a drop in
immunity from the host animal. While some cases may persist for
months, most cases are readily cleared up using a combination of
special insecticidal dips as well as parasite medications that are
given orally. It is understandable that the young dogs, by having to
devote so much of their energy to growing and teething, may fall
susceptible to the opportunistic mites. But what about the older
dogs, like Kobe? When we see the problem in older animals, there is
always a concern that there is a concurrent illness which prevents
the immune system from devoting its full attention to controlling
the mites. In Kobe’s case, no other malady could be found and in
spite of the application of the dips and ingestion of the
antiparasitic medication and antibiotics, the condition continued to
worsen to the point that we considered euthanizing the poor dog.
This called for drastic action, so I decided to try a new regimen
for combating the mites. Normally the dip (Mitaban) is applied over
the whole body at one to two week intervals. We started applying the
dip over the affected areas twice daily after literally giving Kobe
facial treatments twice daily. Our devoted technician, Eloisa, spent
30 minutes twice daily, soaking Kobe’s face with warm towels,
drawing out the infection and opening the pores where the mites
hide. This allowed the dip to penetrate more deeply. Kobe, sensing
that the treatments would help, sat patiently and allowed Eloisa to
work her miracle. Within a week, the skin started to improve, at
first slowly and then dramatically, and after a month everything had
returned to normal and the mites were gone!
But we weren’t finished. Six weeks later, the condition returned. By
reinstituting our new treatment, the condition was rapidly brought
under control. The challenge now is how to prevent another relapse.
To this end, we will have Kobe’s “parents” use the dip
prophylactically every two weeks in an attempt to keep mite
populations to a minimum.
As we set sail into uncharted territory, I can only hope that this
second treatment improvisation is as effective in preventing
recurrence as the first improvisation was in terms of correcting the
condition.
One side note -- as sick as Kobe was, he never missed a meal!
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