Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet Modification

A 10-year old, castrated male, Bichon Frise with a history of hyperadrenocorticism and intrahepatic portal vein hypoplasia was diagnosed with superficial necrolytic dermatitis (SND). The dog exhibited thick crusts on the chin, muzzle, prepuce, and paws. In addition, the dorsal surfaces of all paws w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jared A. Jaffey, Robert C. Backus, Megan Sprinkle, Catherine Ruggiero, Sylvia H. Ferguson, Kate Shumway
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Veterinary Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fvets.2020.00028/full
id doaj-7de3999c12834d28962f2060c2e19606
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7de3999c12834d28962f2060c2e196062020-11-25T01:36:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Veterinary Science2297-17692020-01-01710.3389/fvets.2020.00028498619Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet ModificationJared A. Jaffey0Jared A. Jaffey1Robert C. Backus2Megan Sprinkle3Catherine Ruggiero4Sylvia H. Ferguson5Kate Shumway6Department of Small Animal Medicine and Surgery, College of Veterinary Medicine, Midwestern University, Glendale, AZ, United StatesDepartment of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, Veterinary Health Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, United StatesDepartment of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, Veterinary Health Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, United StatesDepartment of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, Veterinary Health Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, United StatesDepartment of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, Veterinary Health Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, United StatesDepartment of Pathology and Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Midwestern University, Glendale, AZ, United StatesDepartment of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, Veterinary Health Center, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, United StatesA 10-year old, castrated male, Bichon Frise with a history of hyperadrenocorticism and intrahepatic portal vein hypoplasia was diagnosed with superficial necrolytic dermatitis (SND). The dog exhibited thick crusts on the chin, muzzle, prepuce, and paws. In addition, the dorsal surfaces of all paws were erythematous while the palmar/plantar surfaces were hyperkeratotic, hardened, and painful. The dog was treated with intravenous amino acid infusions (AAI), raw egg yolks, as well as zinc and omega-3 fatty acid oral supplements. The dog required AAI once every 2–3 weeks because this coincided with recrudescence of painful skin lesions. The dog was subsequently diagnosed with diabetes mellitus. A consult with the Nutrition Service was pursued 220 days after the original SND diagnosis because of concern for feeding raw eggs and for malnutrition since appetite was variable, muscle condition was reduced, and greater than 50% of ingested calories were from foods that were not nutritionally complete. There was also concern regarding the variability of the diet and the impact it would have on the management of diabetes mellitus. The diet was prepared by the dog owner according to a provided recipe and presented twice daily. The diet was rich in high quality protein and fat. All other treatments including medications, supplements, and bathing schedule remained unchanged at the time of diet modification. The dog was subclinical for SND associated clinical signs approximately 3 weeks after the diet modification, which also coincided with the last AAI. The AAI was postponed and was next administered 7 weeks later (i.e., 10 weeks from the previous infusion). The dog remained subclinical for SND related clinical signs and continued to receive AAI once every 10–12 weeks until he was euthanized 718 days later for complications related to severe multi-drug resistant, skin infections. In conclusion, this report highlights a novel role for nutritionally balanced home-made diets designed by a board-certified veterinary nutritionist could substantially increase time interval between AAI and outcome in dogs with SND.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fvets.2020.00028/fullhepatocutaneous syndromehypoaminoacidemianutritionvitamin Dvitamin Alysine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jared A. Jaffey
Jared A. Jaffey
Robert C. Backus
Megan Sprinkle
Catherine Ruggiero
Sylvia H. Ferguson
Kate Shumway
spellingShingle Jared A. Jaffey
Jared A. Jaffey
Robert C. Backus
Megan Sprinkle
Catherine Ruggiero
Sylvia H. Ferguson
Kate Shumway
Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet Modification
Frontiers in Veterinary Science
hepatocutaneous syndrome
hypoaminoacidemia
nutrition
vitamin D
vitamin A
lysine
author_facet Jared A. Jaffey
Jared A. Jaffey
Robert C. Backus
Megan Sprinkle
Catherine Ruggiero
Sylvia H. Ferguson
Kate Shumway
author_sort Jared A. Jaffey
title Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet Modification
title_short Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet Modification
title_full Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet Modification
title_fullStr Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet Modification
title_full_unstemmed Successful Long-Term Management of Canine Superficial Necrolytic Dermatitis With Amino Acid Infusions and Nutritionally Balanced Home-Made Diet Modification
title_sort successful long-term management of canine superficial necrolytic dermatitis with amino acid infusions and nutritionally balanced home-made diet modification
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Veterinary Science
issn 2297-1769
publishDate 2020-01-01
description A 10-year old, castrated male, Bichon Frise with a history of hyperadrenocorticism and intrahepatic portal vein hypoplasia was diagnosed with superficial necrolytic dermatitis (SND). The dog exhibited thick crusts on the chin, muzzle, prepuce, and paws. In addition, the dorsal surfaces of all paws were erythematous while the palmar/plantar surfaces were hyperkeratotic, hardened, and painful. The dog was treated with intravenous amino acid infusions (AAI), raw egg yolks, as well as zinc and omega-3 fatty acid oral supplements. The dog required AAI once every 2–3 weeks because this coincided with recrudescence of painful skin lesions. The dog was subsequently diagnosed with diabetes mellitus. A consult with the Nutrition Service was pursued 220 days after the original SND diagnosis because of concern for feeding raw eggs and for malnutrition since appetite was variable, muscle condition was reduced, and greater than 50% of ingested calories were from foods that were not nutritionally complete. There was also concern regarding the variability of the diet and the impact it would have on the management of diabetes mellitus. The diet was prepared by the dog owner according to a provided recipe and presented twice daily. The diet was rich in high quality protein and fat. All other treatments including medications, supplements, and bathing schedule remained unchanged at the time of diet modification. The dog was subclinical for SND associated clinical signs approximately 3 weeks after the diet modification, which also coincided with the last AAI. The AAI was postponed and was next administered 7 weeks later (i.e., 10 weeks from the previous infusion). The dog remained subclinical for SND related clinical signs and continued to receive AAI once every 10–12 weeks until he was euthanized 718 days later for complications related to severe multi-drug resistant, skin infections. In conclusion, this report highlights a novel role for nutritionally balanced home-made diets designed by a board-certified veterinary nutritionist could substantially increase time interval between AAI and outcome in dogs with SND.
topic hepatocutaneous syndrome
hypoaminoacidemia
nutrition
vitamin D
vitamin A
lysine
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fvets.2020.00028/full
work_keys_str_mv AT jaredajaffey successfullongtermmanagementofcaninesuperficialnecrolyticdermatitiswithaminoacidinfusionsandnutritionallybalancedhomemadedietmodification
AT jaredajaffey successfullongtermmanagementofcaninesuperficialnecrolyticdermatitiswithaminoacidinfusionsandnutritionallybalancedhomemadedietmodification
AT robertcbackus successfullongtermmanagementofcaninesuperficialnecrolyticdermatitiswithaminoacidinfusionsandnutritionallybalancedhomemadedietmodification
AT megansprinkle successfullongtermmanagementofcaninesuperficialnecrolyticdermatitiswithaminoacidinfusionsandnutritionallybalancedhomemadedietmodification
AT catherineruggiero successfullongtermmanagementofcaninesuperficialnecrolyticdermatitiswithaminoacidinfusionsandnutritionallybalancedhomemadedietmodification
AT sylviahferguson successfullongtermmanagementofcaninesuperficialnecrolyticdermatitiswithaminoacidinfusionsandnutritionallybalancedhomemadedietmodification
AT kateshumway successfullongtermmanagementofcaninesuperficialnecrolyticdermatitiswithaminoacidinfusionsandnutritionallybalancedhomemadedietmodification
_version_ 1725064785495588864