Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Atopic dermatitis

A

Inherited
Relapsing
Pruritic dermatitis with IgE

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2
Q

Pathogenesis of AD

A

Type 1 hypersensitivity
T cell imbalances
Primary skin barrier defect

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3
Q

T cell imbalance acute

A

T2 > T1

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4
Q

T cell imbalance chronic disease

A

T1 > T2

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5
Q

What breeds are predisposed to AD

A
Shar pei
Terriers
Setters
Retrievers
Beagles
Dalmations
Cockers
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6
Q

When does AD usually occur

A

Onset between 1-3 years

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7
Q

Where do the lesions usually affect

A

Pruritus and erythema on face, feet, ears, groin, axilla

*front feet first

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8
Q

Secondary diseases of AD

A

Pyoderma

Malassezia dermatitis and otitis

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9
Q

Willemse’s criteria for diagnosis of AD

A

Need 3 major and 3 minor

Major: pruritus, face/feet involvement, lichenification of flexor surfaces, chronically relapsing dermatitis, familial history, breed predilection

Minor: onset of signs before 3 yrs old, facial erythema, bacterial conjunctivitis, superficial pyoderma, hyperhidrosis, positive skin test, elevated allergen specific IgE

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10
Q

Why do allergy testing? What type of testing is there

A

To select which allergens to use for immunotherapy

IDST and serology

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11
Q

What does IDST do

A

Evaluates presence of IgE in the skin and mast cell degranulation

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12
Q

What causes false positives on IDST

A
Irritant allergens
Contaminated allergens
Skin sensitizing antibodies
Poor technique
Substances that trigger mast cell degranulation
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13
Q

What causes false negative reactions on IDST

A
Subq injections
Too little allergen
Outdated allergen
Steroids
Antihistamines
Tranquilizers
Progestational compound
Anergy
Off season testin
Estrus, severe stress
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14
Q

What does serology measure

A

Circulating allergen specific IgE

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15
Q

Advantages of serology

A

No need to clip, discontinue drugs, or keep allergens in stock

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16
Q

Disadvantages of serology

A

Poor correlation with IDST
False positives
Not reproducible results

17
Q

Which test is more specific? Sensitive?

A

Skin test is more specific

Serology is more sensitive

18
Q

Therapy of AD

A

Treat all concurrent disease
Avoid allergen
Hyposensitization (vax)
Systemic and topical therapy

19
Q

What do glucocorticoids do for AD

A

Palliative only

20
Q

What is cyclosporine

A

Immunomodulant; life long

21
Q

What is oclacitinib

A

Apoquel
JAK inhibitor
May precipitate demodex

22
Q

What is cytopoint

A

IL-31 inhibitor which is necessary for pruritis

23
Q

Why wont antihistamines work all the tim

A

Histamine isn’t the main mediator of AD in dogs

More effective for prevention than treatment

24
Q

What do essential fatty acids do

A

Anti inflammatory

Help restore barrier function

25
Q

Topical steroids

A

Triamcinolone spray

Hydrocortisone cream

26
Q

What is capsaicin used for

A

Topical treatment for localized pruritus

27
Q

What does tacrolimus do

A

Topical calcineurin inhibitor

28
Q

Why treatment for barrier function

A

Phytosphingosine