With the weather warming and allergy season getting under way, there is no better time to talk about skin disease. Allergies in pets can be just as frustrating and difficult to deal with as allergies in people in that what works for one pet may not work for another. All systems of medicine struggle with the treatment of allergies.
Allergy symptoms occur when the inflammation threshold in the body has been surpassed. This is when our pets begin to itch, and it is often referred to as the rain barrel effect. Inflammation building in the body is like the water level rising in a rain barrel. The water reaching the top and finally spilling over is likened to inflammation finally rising to the level that it can be seen in the form of itching.
An integrative approach to allergies and skin disease involves decreasing the overall level of inflammation in the body so that when allergy season hits, the level of inflammation is low enough that symptoms never show or are mild enough to control with benign therapy like bathing or supplements.
So how do we control overall inflammation? First, we need to be sure that there are not pathogenic or opportunistic microbes growing on the skin that create inflammation and itch. We check for these with skin scrapes, skin cytology and rarely, skin cultures. Once the organisms are dealt with, we can see how much of the itching is caused by allergies and devise strategies for keeping the infection away.
Those strategies can include anti-inflammatory medication, like antihistamines, Prednisone or Atopica. They often include natural anti-inflammatories like omega-3 fatty acids and fish oil. Frequent bathing or other topical therapies can help reduce the allergy load on the surface of the skin.
When approaching inflammation from an Eastern perspective, food is always involved. Even when there is no documented food allergy or sensitivity, it is important to recognize that food plays a role in inflammation.
For some pets, the high carbohydrate levels in dry, kibbled diets promote inflammation through multiple pathways. For others, the protein content is too low for them and circulation of blood to the skin suffers, the skin’s defenses drop and secondary infections occur. For others still, there is not enough moisture in the diet and subsequently, in the skin.
In addition to traditional therapies for skin allergies, an integrative approach always involves changes to diet, supplements and herbal therapy to regain balance, decrease inflammation and fortify the body’s natural defenses. Regaining balance is like peeling an onion, unfolding layers to get to the root of the problem. For long-standing skin disease, it can take six to nine months to achieve control and the itch is often the last part to improve, but it is well worth the effort.