The detail information of Folliculitis
Basic Information

Disease Description: An infection of the hair follicles.

Inherit Mode: -

Disease Symptom: In mild folliculitis, you will typically find many small pastules (puss filled pimples) with a hair shaft protruding through the center of each. Dogs with mild cases may have rings of scales around the follicles. Once the follicles become infected, the infection can bore deeply into the dermis, forming large pustules and furuncles (boil) that rupture, discharge pus, and crust over. Draining sinus tracts develop in cases of deep folliculitis.Folliculitis usually involves the under-surface of the body, especially the armpits, abdomen, and groin. A condition called Schnauzer comedo syndrome is common in Miniature Schnauzers. Dogs suffering from this disease have many large blackheads running down the middle of their back.

Disease Cause: Folliculitis often occurs as a secondary complication to scabies, demodectic mange, seborrhea, hormonal skin disease, and other problems. Some cases are caused by vigorous grooming, which traumatizes the hair follicles.

Disease Diagnose: It is important to identify and treat the underlying cause as well as the folliculitis

Treat Method: Mild cases should be treated by bathing the dog with a benzoyl peroxide shampoo (OxyDex or Pyoben) twice a week for 2 - 3 weeks. Correct any predisposing causes such as unsanitary quarters.Deep folliculitis requires vigorous topical and systemic therapy. Clip away the hair from infected skin on long haired dogs (do not clip short hair dogs), and bathe the dog twice a day for 10 days with a povidone-iodine shampoo (such as Betadine) or one with chlorhexidine (such as Nolvasan). As the skin infection improves, switch to a benzoyl peroxide shampoo such as Stiff OxyDex, OxyDex, or Pyoben, to be used once or twice per week. Continue this until all healing is complete.The dog should be placed on an oral antibiotic selected on the basis od culture and sensitivity tests. Continue oral antibiotics for 6 - 8 weeks, including at least 2 weeks beyond apparent cure. Treatment failures occur when antibiotics are stopped too soon or used at too low a dosage.

Breeder Advice: -

Disease Description Source: Link

Associated Diseases
There are no associated diseases in OMIA/CIDD.
Associated Breeds
iDog Breed Number Breed Name Personality Height Weight Breed Source
CB58 English Bulldog Calm, courageous, and friendly; dignified but amusing. 35.6-38.1 cm 22.7 kg (male), 18.1 kg (female) United Kingdom (England)
CB74 Chinook Patient, smart, willing to please; a devoted family dog 61-66 cm (male), 55.9-61 cm (female) 24.9-40.8 kg (male), 22.7-29.5 kg (female) United States
CB85 Dandie Dinmont Terrier Independent, proud, smart; affectionate at home, bold and tenacious in the field 20.3-27.9 cm 8.2-10.9 kg United Kingdom (Scotland)
CB89 Dogo Argentino Loyal, trustworthy,courageous 61-68.6 cm (male), 59.7-66 cm (female) 36.3-45.4 kg Argentina
CB117 Gordon Setter Bold, confident, and resolute afield; sweetly affectionate by the fireside 61-68.6 cm (male), 58.4-66 cm (female) 24.9-36.3 kg (male), 20.4-31.8 kg (female) United Kingdom (Scotland)
CB132 Irish Terrier Bold, dashing, even reckless; stouthearted at work, tenderhearted at home 45.7 cm 12.2 kg (male), 11.3 kg (female) Ireland
CB175 Otterhound Even-Tempered, amiable, boisterous 68.6 cm (male), 61 cm (female) 52.2 kg (male), 36.3 kg (female) United Kingdom (England)
CB206 Russell Terrier Alert, lively, inquisitive, and friendly 25.4-30.5 cm 4.1-6.8 kg United Kingdom (England)
CB215 Sealyham Terrier Alert and outgoing; stubbornness is tempered by a sly sense of humor 26.7 cm 10.4-10.9 kg (male), slightly less (females) United Kingdom (Wales)
CB217 Japanese Shiba Inu Alert, active, and attentive 35.6-43.2 cm (male), 33-40.6 cm (female) 8.2-10.9 kg (male), 6.8-9.1 kg (female) Japan
References
There are no references.