Dermatological diseases in dogs are generally caused by bacteria, mold, ectoparasiosis, and also caused by flea allergies, allergic dermatitis and difficult-to-treat folliculosis. They should be treated symptomatically according to the cause.
For local infection of bacterial skin diseases, you can use topical ointment or antibacterial scrub to take a bath once every 5 days. If it is a systemic infection, oral medication is required, plus antibacterial hair cleanser, and the treatment is continued for more than 3 weeks. Local and systemic treatments for fungal skin diseases. Treatment is required for more than 4 weeks.
The scabies will drill holes in the epidermis, forming a tunnel-like cavity, and the skin will become thicker and form a scab. It requires continuous treatment for 4 weeks and a medicinal bath (wash once every 3-4 days).
Fystolic cystosomes are generally related to heredity and immunity. The treatment duration will last for 3 months. In addition, avoid tension and supplement nutrition to show results.
Allergic skinworms have many reasons for allergic dermatosis. Common ones include human-absorbing, such as pollen, dust mites, tobacco, etc.; contact-based ones such as detergents, floors, leather, etc.; food-based ones such as beef and pork with high allergens. Due to many reasons, it is necessary to provide a simple and clean environment and simple, hypoallergenic food in daily life to reduce the chance of concurrency.
Distemperature should be treated early. In the early stages of dog distemper, dogs have mental fatigue, decreased appetite, and watery secretions flow out of their eyes and nose. The body temperature rises to above 40 degrees Celsius for 3 days, and then the body temperature subsides. It rises again after a few days, lasting for a long time, and then secondary infection occurs. In the later stage of the disease, the sick dog is mentally abnormal, with ankylosing spasms throughout the body, foaming at the mouth, coma, loss of sensation, and finally die of respiratory muscle paralysis and heart failure.