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Health A-Z

Skin Allergies (Atopic Dermatitis)

Owner and veterinary guidance with linked treatments and source citations.

Owner-first summary Vet-depth available
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Skin Allergies (Atopic Dermatitis)

Species: Dog

Breeds Affected: All Breeds (common in retrievers, terriers, bulldogs, and other breeds; often starts <3 years of age)

Clinical review: Veterinary reviewer metadata is not available yet.

Guidance by audience

Use the global Pet owner/Vet toggle in the header. Each mode shows only what that audience needs.

For Pet Owners

Quick summary

Canine atopic dermatitis is an allergic skin condition caused by hypersensitivity to environmental allergens like pollen, dust mites, or mold. It leads to chronic itching and inflammation of the skin. Flea allergy dermatitis (allergy to flea bites) is another very common skin allergy in dogs. Allergies often have a genetic predisposition and are one of the top reasons for vet visits, as skin/allergy issues are widespread in dogs. Track appetite, hydration, stool/urine changes, energy level, and symptom pattern over time.

Red flags

Call your vet today: Persistent or worsening symptoms. Emergency now: Collapse, severe breathing issues, seizures, uncontrolled bleeding, or severe pain.

What to expect at the vet

Diagnosis should combine history, exam findings, and condition-specific testing.

Prevention checklist

Reduce preventable risk through hygiene, vaccination/preventives when applicable, and routine veterinary follow-up.

For Veterinarians

Diagnostics

Diagnosis should combine history, exam findings, and condition-specific testing.

Differentials

Differential diagnosis considerations are not available yet.

Treatment considerations

Management is usually lifelong and focuses on controlling itch and avoiding allergens. Avoidance of known allergens (when possible) – e.g. using air filters, keeping dogs indoors during high pollen times – can help. Medical therapy to relieve itching and inflammation is central: options include antihistamines (sometimes helpful in mild cases), omega-3 fatty acid supplements (to improve skin barrier), and frequent bathing with hypoallergenic or medicated shampoos to remove allergens from the coat. For moderate to severe atopic dermatitis, modern immunomodulatory medications are often used: Apoquel (oclacitinib) is an oral medication that blocks itch signals, and Cytopoint (lokivetmab) is an injectable monoclonal antibody that neutralizes an itch-inducing cytokine – both provide effective itch relief. In addition, corticosteroids (prednisone) can be used, particularly for acute flares, but long-term steroid use is avoided if possible due to side effects. Immunotherapy (allergy shots or drops) can be pursued: after allergy testing, dilute allergen injections are given regularly to build tolerance. Treating secondary infections with antibiotics or antifungals when they occur is also important.

Follow-up strategy

Follow-up strategy is not available yet.

What To Do Now

Escalate care quickly if symptoms worsen, persist, or include emergency warning signs.

UrgencySignsAction
Call your vet today Persistent or worsening symptoms Call your veterinarian the same day for guidance and exam scheduling.
Emergency now Collapse, severe breathing issues, seizures, uncontrolled bleeding, or severe pain Seek emergency veterinary care immediately.

Prevention Checklist

Reduce preventable risk through hygiene, vaccination/preventives when applicable, and routine veterinary follow-up.

Treatments and Medication Links

Use these medication pages as a reference for options your veterinarian may discuss.

Detailed treatment strategy remains in the Vet view to avoid duplicate narrative blocks.

No linked medications are available yet.

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Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ content is not available for this condition yet.

Data Sources

Last updated: February 16, 2026, 11:11 AM UTC

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Revision History

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  • structured_enrichment
    2026-02-16 11:11 · etl
  • structured_enrichment
    2026-02-16 11:00 · etl
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    2026-02-15 11:11 · etl
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    2026-02-15 11:00 · etl
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    2026-02-14 11:10 · etl
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    2026-02-14 11:00 · etl
  • structured_enrichment
    2026-02-13 11:11 · etl
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    2026-02-13 11:00 · etl
  • structured_enrichment
    2026-02-13 04:45 · etl
  • structured_enrichment
    2026-02-12 22:47 · etl

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