| Palliative therapy is needed to keep the dog comfortable while the underlying cause is identified and secondary skin diseases are corrected. For treatment of pyoderma, an antibiotic with known sensitivity against
Staphylococcus
intermedius
should be appropriate.
Malassezia
may be treated systemically with ketoconazole. In addition to addressing any secondary infections, antipruritic therapy and shampoo therapy are usually needed to help control the seborrhea and speed the return of the skin to a normal state. Shampoo therapy can decrease the number of bacteria and yeast on the skin surface, the amount of scale and sebum present, and the level of pruritus; it also helps normalize the epidermal turnover rate. |
| In the past, seborrhea has been classified as seborrhea sicca (dry seborrhea), seborrhea oleosa (oily seborrhea), or seborrheic dermatitis (inflammatory seborrhea). This scheme can still be used in determining the type of shampoo needed; however, most seborrheic animals have varying degrees of all 3 of these classifications of seborrhea. |
| Most products contained in shampoos can be classified based on their effects as keratolytic, keratoplastic, emollient, antipruritic, or antimicrobial. Keratolytic products include sulfur, salicylic acid, tar, selenium sulfide, propylene glycol, fatty acids, and benzoyl peroxide. They remove stratum corneum cells by causing cellular damage that results in ballooning and sloughing of the surface keratinocytes. This reduces the scale and makes the skin feel softer.
Shampoos containing keratolytic products frequently exacerbate scaling during the first 14 days of treatment, due to the sloughed scales getting caught in the hair coat. The scales will be removed by continued bathing, but owners should be warned that the scaling often worsens initially. Keratoplastic products help normalize keratinization and reduce scale formation by slowing down epidermal basal cell mitosis. Tar, sulfur, salicylic acid, and selenium sulfide are
examples of keratoplastic agents. Emollients (eg, lactic acid, sodium lactate, lanolin, and numerous oils, such as corn, coconut, peanut, and cottonseed) are indicated for any scaling dermatosis because they reduce transepidermal water loss. They work best after the skin has been rehydrated and are excellent adjunct products after shampooing. Antibacterial agents include benzoyl peroxide, chlorhexidine, iodine, ethyl lactate, and triclosan.
Antifungal ingredients include chlorhexidine, sulfur, iodine, ketoconazole, and miconazole. Boric and acetic acids are also used as topical antimicrobials. |
| It is important to know how individual shampoo ingredients act, as well as any additive or synergistic effects they have, because most shampoos are a combination of products. The selection of appropriate antiseborrheic shampoo therapy is based on hair coat and skin scaling and oiliness, of which there are 4 general presentations: 1) mild scaling and no oiliness, 2) moderate to marked scaling and mild oiliness (the most common), 3) moderate to marked scaling and moderate
oiliness, 4) mild scaling and marked oiliness. These categories are intended to guide the type of shampoo therapy necessary; however, all factors for each individual dog should be considered. |
| Dogs with mild scaling and no oiliness need mild shampoos that are gentle, cleansing, hypoallergenic, or moisturizing. These shampoos are indicated for dogs that have mild seborrheic changes or that are irritated by medicated shampoos, or for owners that tend to bathe the dog too often. These products often contain emollient oils, lanolin, lactic acid, urea, glycerin, or fatty acids. Emollient sprays or rinses are often used in conjunction with these shampoos. |
| Dogs with moderate to marked scaling and mild oiliness should be bathed with shampoos that contain sulfur and salicylic acid. Both agents are keratolytic, keratoplastic, antibacterial, and antipruritic. In addition, sulfur is antiparasitic and antifungal. Some of these shampoos also contain ingredients that are antibacterial, antifungal, and moisturizing, which can help control secondary pyoderma,
Malassezia
spp
, and excessive scaling. Shampoos that contain ethyl lactate lower the cutaneous pH (which has a bacteriostatic or bactericidal action by inhibiting bacterial lipases), normalize keratinization, solubilize fats, and decrease sebaceous secretions. These actions also result in potent antibacterial activity. |
| Dogs with moderate to severe scaling and moderate oiliness often benefit most from tar-containing shampoos. Tar exerts potent keratoplastic effects by slowing basal epidermal cell DNA synthesis. It is often combined with sulfur and salicylic acid. Wood and coal are distilled to produce a tremendous variety of products called crude coal tars. Because of the variation in agents and techniques used, exact comparisons of shampoos are difficult. More refined tars are usually less
irritating and more stable but are more expensive to produce. More tar is not necessarily better. Only those tar products from reputable companies should be used. Tar shampoos usually have a distinct and unpleasant odor that lessens as the hair coat dries. Owner compliance is often diminished for products that have a prominent odor. |
| In dogs with severe oiliness and minimal scaling, profound odor, erythema, inflammation, and a secondary generalized pyoderma or
Malassezia
dermatitis are often present. This group requires the most aggressive topical therapy. Shampoos that contain benzoyl peroxide provide strong degreasing actions along with potent antibacterial and follicular flushing activities. Because benzoyl peroxide shampoos are such strong degreasing agents, they can be irritating and drying. Other antibacterial shampoos are better suited in dogs that have superficial pyoderma without significant oiliness. As with tar, benzoyl
peroxide has critical production requirements, and only refined products from reputable companies should be used. Most human products contain 5-10% benzoyl peroxide and should not be used because they are irritating to dogs. The follicular flushing action of benzoyl peroxide makes it ideal for dogs with numerous comedones or with demodicosis. Benzoyl peroxide gels (5%) are good choices when antibacterial, degreasing, or follicular flushing actions are desired for focal areas,
such as in localized demodicosis, canine acne, or Schnauzer comedone syndrome. However, these gels may be irritating. |
|  |