Difference between revisions of "Small Animal Dermatology Q&A 16"

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*cystic or dilated hair follicles. <br>
 
*cystic or dilated hair follicles. <br>
 
As hairs regrow, they grow more slowly and are often deformed. This disorder has been seen in cats with blue or cream colored coats.
 
As hairs regrow, they grow more slowly and are often deformed. This disorder has been seen in cats with blue or cream colored coats.
|l1=Alopecia and Hypotrichosis
+
|l1=
 
|q2=How is this disorder treated?
 
|q2=How is this disorder treated?
 
|a2=
 
|a2=

Revision as of 15:46, 21 July 2011


Mansonlogo This question was provided by Manson Publishing as part of the OVAL Project. See more small animal dermatological questions




Small Animal Dermatology Q&A 16.jpg



A 2-year-old blue doberman pinscher dog was referred for the problem of an ‘endocrine alopecia’ of unknown etiology. Previous diagnostic tests were normal or negative and included: skin scrapings, dermatophyte culture, complete blood count, urinalysis, serum chemistry panel, thyroid hormone evaluation, low-dose dexamethasone suppression test, and surgical neutering. Dermatological examination reveals a thin hair coat, nodular-like hair follicles, comedones, bacterial pyoderma, and scaling. All of the other littermates are similarly affected.


Question Answer Article
What is the most likely diagnosis, and what is the cause? [[|Link to Article]]
How is this disorder treated? [[|Link to Article]]
What are the most common histological findings? Link to Article


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