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| + | {{review}} |
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| + | In spite of severe nutritional deprivation, the donkey’s skin remains |
| + | remarkably healthy unless there is concurrent trauma. The combination |
| + | of trauma (especially recurrent injury) and malnutrition is probably one of |
| + | the most significant combinations with respect to the health of the skin. |
| + | A nutritionally deprived donkey becomes liable to [[Ectoparasites - Donkey|parasitic]] (lice, mites and |
| + | Habronema spp.) and [[Bacterial Skin Infections - Donkey|bacterial infections]]. [[Bacterial Skin Infections - Donkey#Dermatophilosis|Dermatophilosis]] is a common isolate in damaged or inflamed skin but it is difficult to know if this is |
| + | primary or secondary and certainly in the face of nutritional deprivation |
| + | the severity of the infection can be far worse. |
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| + | ==References== |
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| + | * Knottenbelt, D. (2008) Skin disorders In Svendsen, E.D., Duncan, J. and Hadrill, D. (2008) ''The Professional Handbook of the Donkey'', 4th edition, Whittet Books, Chapter 8 |
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