Thursday, November 18, 2010

Itchy Dog - Natural Remedies Update

There are some effective natural treatments really work and have been proven by evidence based research. 
However, most products sold in pet shops and online are not the product of university veterinary research, and as a result are unproven or even detrimental to the dog's skin condition.
An understanding of skin anatomy and the physiology of inflamed red itchy skin is important when using any treatment and in particular a natural remedy.
There are a lot of natural remedies on the market and many of the products available are either useless or harmful. 

Most natural products sold for itchy dog skin have had no clinical trial, and have no data or evidence that they work or even help. 
Many natural remedies promoted for itchy skin can actually be detrimental to healing and soothing in the case of dogs with canine atopic dermatitis.
The itchy dog is usually suffering from allergic skin disease.
In simple terms it is either flea allergy, food allergy or canine atopic dermatitis.
These dogs have a very dry skin due to a barrier defect in the protective lipid layer of the skin. 
Many natural remedies are acidic as in the case of tea tree oil which further dries and irritates the itchy, red and inflamed skin. 
Putting an acidic cleaning product on dry irritated and itchy skin is akin to throwing petrol on fire.
Some natural remedies contain surfactants that strip oils from the surface of the skin. 
In dogs with canine atopic dermatitis that already have dry skin, this exacerbates the itch. 
Dry itchy skin should not be dried further and many acidic or soap products will worsen the itch.

Fleas cannot be controlled with natural products. You should invest in a brand product that works. 
Neem is not effective in preventing fleas. It also smells really bad and will make your house stink as well.
For a FREE "Home Diagnosis Manual to the itchy dog" and information on natural treatment that really stops your dog itching and scratching go to http://www.scratchingdoghelp.com

For more information on treating the itchy scratching dog the natural way and to find out how to stop the itch go to http://www.scratchingdoghelp.com/treating_itchy_dogs.html

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Itchy Dog - Steroid Use

Veterinarians are pressured to fix an itchy dog first time every time. 
This has brought tremendous pressure to use and sometimes over prescribe corticosteroids such as prednisolone. 
Many clients of itchy dogs get frustrated and change from one vet to another searching for a miracle cure to their dogs' allergic skin disease. 
This pressure to deliver results sees veterinarians reach for the steroids as a frontline treatment for all allergic skin disease.

Steroids do work for allergic skin disease such as atopic dermatitis. 
Steroids do not work so well for adverse food reactions like allergic skin disease from food allergy. 
All itchy dogs should have an elimination food trial to rule out food allergy.

Side effects to steroids are common. 
These include dependence can lead to life threatening Addisonian crisis upon withdrawal. 
The drugs cause an increase in thirst and urination. 
Long term use can lead to hepatic disease, diabetes, osteoporosis and pathological fracture. 
Other side effects include skin disease such as calcinosis cutis and an impaired immune system that may lead to infections such as cystitis and pyoderma.
Demodex mange is also a feature of immunosuppression caused by steroids. 
Hair loss and a pendulous abdomen is a feature. 
Cataracts and diseases of the cornea can also be a side effect of impaired lipid metabolism. 
Pancreatitis may also be a complication of long term treatment with corticosteroids.

Recent developments in the understanding of atopic dermatitis have opened up new ways for treating these dogs with natural treatment. 
Dogs with atopic dermatitis have an impaired skin barrier. 
This is the modern focus for treatment

For your FREE "Home Diagnosis Manual to the Itchy " go to http://www.scratchingdoghelp.com 
For more information on treating the itchy dog with natural treatments and therapy go to http://www.scratchingdoghelp.com/treating_itchy_dogs.html

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

itchy dog T-Bone at Gnomesville www.scratchingdoghelp.com

Stop Dog Itching - Natural Treatment That Does Not Work

Peppermint is sometimes promoted as a skin product to stop itching in dogs. 
Peppermint is extremely acidic and is irritating to inflamed skin. It also is extremely drying and irritant. 
Dogs with allergic skin disease have very dry skin due to a faulty skin barrier. 
Acidifying agents are going to further inflame and irritate the skin and thus worsening the itch. Don't use it


Sulfur products are extremely irritating to the skin because they dry it out. This is the worst possible thing you could use in a dog with a faulty skin barrier and allergic skin disease. Do not dry out the skin.


Neem is often promoted as an insect repellent. This is true to a degree. 
Neem stinks. It smells really bad and if you put it on your dog, your house will stink. 
Your carpets will be so badly affected with this pungent odour and when you pull them out and throw them away, your house will still stink. 
Neem has absolutely no benefit to your dogs allergy problem and will do nothing to stop the itch.


Grapefruit seed extract may be full of anti oxidants but won't do anything to stop your dog scratching. 
It is also marketed for flea and mange control. 
Grape seed extract will not kill or repel fleas. 
It will not kill mange. This is an outright lie.


Tea tree oil is marketed as a cure for everything and especially skin problems. 
Dogs with allergic skin disease are missing a protein in their protective skin barrier that means water escapes from the skin making it very dry. 
Acidic products which further damage this defective barrier and further dry and irritate the skin are absolutely the worst things you can use. 
 Do not use acidic products or soaps on dogs with allergic skin disease. 
This makes the itch worse and delays healing further. 
Tea tree oil does not soothe red,inflamed, traumatised skin that has been scratched. It stings.

For natural treatment that really stops dogs itching visit http://www.scratchingdoghelp.com/treating_itchy_dogs.html

For a FREE "Home Diagnosis Manual to the Itchy Dog" go to http://www.scratchingdoghelp.com