Posts Tagged ‘yeast infections’

Dog Health Questions: Do You Think This is Vaginitis?

IdeaMan21 | July 9th, 2009

After doing my research, I am almost 100% positive that my 11 month
old bitch has the juvie (sp) form of vaginitis. Or a yeast type of infection.

She has a bit of white discharge, is smelling “good” to my males, but
isn’t ‘off’ in any other way. She hasn’t yet had her first season, and
she’s not coming in either. So that isn’t causing it.

When asking another breeder about this, she asked if my bitch liked to
pee with her butt practically on the ground, when I answered yes, then
she said for sure I had vaginitis.

My bitch was minimally vaxd, and is currently in the process of switching over to a prey model raw diet. Which she loves, btw.

I really didn’t want to put her on antibiotics, is there anything else I can give her? And I don’t want to spay her, either.
**********************************************************

My dog had the same thing and was told that some dogs never get rid of it but, mine did after only 1 round of antibiotics. If you do go the antibiotic route, also take some enzymes and probotics to keep the good bacteria.

Probotics are very beneficial for all dogs.
**********************************************************

I really didn’t want to put her on antibiotics, is there anything else & I can give her? And I don’t want to spay her, either. This is quite common in young, pre-pube bitches. Usually it doesn’t bother after her first heat.

Of course if you suspect real infection, a vet trip is warranted. Otherwise, not to worry. You could try a small amount of cranberry/vitamin c in her diet to change the PH …..

I haven’t taken her in yet. My mentor, who is a long time breeder and
worked in a clinic for years immediately knew what I was talking about
when I asked her, and when I checked up on it she matched. Right now
it’s a self diagnosis. :P

All my vet has to do is look at a dog and he’ll break your bank, so I’m still undecided about if I need to take her in and if I do, what I need to ask them to check her for. She goes in for her Interceptor in a couple of weeks, and so I might ask them to take a look at her then.

She’s acting perfectly normal, no straining, nothing funny at all.
Just the slight discharge.

I would like to avoid hormones and antibiotics right now.

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Tags: bladder infection, dog health problems, dog illnesses, dog nutrition, probotics, raw diet, vaginal infection, vaginitis, white discharge, yeast infections

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Dog Itching: More Cures For Dry Flakey Skin

IdeaMan21 | April 25th, 2009

It was recently written:

We put in their dry food twice a day. They get fed twice a day and we have 7 dogs. 4 ten lbs. and 3 60, 60, and 80 lbs…
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 canola oil
1/4 cup cod liver oil
1/4 cup flax seed oil
***************************
What these oils do is add fat to your dogs’ diet. There is no magic to olive, canola or flax seed oils, and all-being plant-derived-are as likely to provoke further inflammation as fix any of it. The only functional oil in the menu is CLO, and that, added to either a raw or kibble menu also delivers more vitamin A and D than either way of feeding warrants.

And FSO, although it does eventually provide some Omega 3 fatty acid, starts with a precursor to it (alpha linolenic acid) which must be converted by the dog at great expense of metabolic energy to linolenic acid. This conversion process all by its lonesome can be inflammatory.

Golden Retriever

Golden Retriever

Yes, add fat to your dogs’ menu. If you want to use an oil, junk all of those and stick with fish body oil (not liver oil). Use capsules or liquid; dose similarly to what your recipe recommends. A tablespoon of fish body oil a day for all but the smallest dog should be adequate.

The small dog can get a teaspoon or so a day. Also consider adding ordinary raw fat to the menu. Supplemental oil can only do so much. Changing/tweaking the diet is more likely to provide faster and less expensive results.

My guess is the oils in the recipe are not recommended because of value but rather because of availability and low price. That they are inappropriate and counterproductive is apparently beside the point.

I’ve also been giving our dogs salmon oil into their daily diet, but Marley has been having dry skin as of late, nevertheless. I’m thinking
all the dry breads and treats made of all those grains might be the root cause of some skin problems. Could the time of year also cause
dry skin, like shedding the winter fur?

Doberman

Doberman

Animal fats like of sheep iis said to also be important in their daily diet as well as other fats, but just minimal amounts. Some days they get chicken with some fat, or heart with that white stuff.

Why do you give the dog bread? This is undoubtedly contributing to his problems. Yes, the dry winter air can cause their skin to be dry, just like ours, but really, stop with the bread! Fat is very important to the diet. Does not have to be super fatty meats like lamb, but it certainly would not hurt to feed these.

You may also find Emu Oil in spray or liquid form at many larger pet supply stores. A relative had gotten the spray for his Doberman and I used it on my Golden. It has a very slight but light scent that is gone within minutes and it did help their skin & coats. Unfortunately the store that carried it has closed down and we don’t have a large supply store here so I’ll be checking elsewhere. I do think Feeders Supply or Pet Smart may carry it if you want to try it.

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Tags: alpha linolenic acid, cod liver oil, dog food, dog health questions, dog itching, dog problems, dry flakey skin, dry skin, Emu oil, flax seed oil, itchy skin, salmon oil, seed oils, skin problems, yeast infections

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Dog Health Problems: Ear Yeast Infections – Change Diet to Raw Feeding

IdeaMan21 | April 18th, 2009

I have a 7-year-old Golden Retriever who seems to have chronic ear infections (mostly yeast) since we moved to the South. Since he was a puppy, I’ve been giving him Brewer’s Yeast & Garlic tablets for skin & coat, and also as a flea deterrent. Could the tablets be causing increased problems with his ears?

Can I ask – what is your Golden eating? Kibble, canned, raw? If commercially prepared foods, what foods? For me personally, diet is always where I start – it seems like eight out of ten times a diet change (if warranted) corrects problems like this.

My opinion? I don’t think the brewer’s yeast and garlic tablets are causing the problem. How often do you clean his ears? Do you use any type of wash or product to clean them?

Better yet eliminate potential irritants which would begin with diet and
supplements. Brewer’s yeast is a common allergen. Vets are all too quick to offer relief of symptoms without looking for cause. Grains, sugars, and starches from carbohydrate laden processed foods would be a good place to begin but a vet is not going to do that!

My friends’s Golden’s had the same problem. She is fortunate her vet offered us Zymox and it works great for her. I check her ears often and if the odor continues a couple days, I grab the Zymox. Rosie is 67# and extremely good at accepting exams or treatments and it only takes her 1/2 an eye dropper daily to each ear for 7-10 days.

It comes in a small squeeze bottle but we put it in an eye-dropper bottle because one drop from the eye dropper is less irritating to a dogs ears than the drip-drip-drip from the original bottle (and way easier on us). Ask your vet if this might be a good choice for your dog.

This has been great for my dog and your vet will give you more details. Here’s the info I included w/another subject a while back…

Zymox OTIC Enzymatic Solution is sold exclusive to veterinarians but you can check it on their web site below or do an on-line search by product name (is distributed to vet supply companies such as Butler). If your vet agrees with the Zymox, do not clean the ears during treatment as that may disrupt the enzyme action. Zymox is offered with and without steroids.

I’ve also used Zymoc for another Golden with great success. Ask for your vet’s opinion.

Thanks for the feedback. I’ve been using Zymox Otic for about a year now — great stuff! (And it’s available online as well — I’ve found it for a lot less than what the vet sells it for.)

I changed Cosmo’s diet several months ago, as he was starting to vomit bile, and it turned out that his food had tons of wheat in it. I switched him to Premium Edge, which is a better quality food. But the ear issues (mostly yeast infections) remain. Should I discontinue the Brewer’s Yeast & Garlic tablets? If so, for how long?

I’d discontinue the Premium Edge! Still full of grains and no doubt contributing to your dogs chronic ear problems. Have you considered a raw diet? You will never get a handle on his ear issues while continuing to feed him a grain based diet.

I just came back from our homeopathic vet. Both of our goldens have this rusty colored gunk in their right ears. The vet says that when they have issues with their right ears, it points to the digestive system, liver and metabolism, if its the left ear, then its usually issues with the hormones.

Since both Goldens have it, it may be coming from too much protein.
Beef seems to be what most dogs have problems digesting :-(

I’ll try omitting the beef, and feed the rest of the stuff, cause I don’t know what I should be changing in their diet, its very diverse with a 75:25 or 80:20. Vet says I should lower the meats and increase in fruits and veggies.

Here is a perfect example to back up my statement last night about
discussing diet with a vet! Regardless of how “homeopathic” or “holistic” they are…and BTW this doesn’t sound like a homeopath at all with that right ear/left ear theory….they have no a clue about diet!

Your vet’s thinking is backwards. It is not protein that feeds yeast, it is starches and sugars from carbohydrates. The problem isn’t the beef, it’s the fruits, veggies and grains. Changing this diet would be quite easy….increase meat and eliminate the fruits and veggies totally.

Dogs are carnivores. Their normal diet is large ungulates which consist of mostly meat (up to 80), around 10% edible bone and 10% organs. That’s it!

They do not eat the stomach contents, have no need for fruits or veggies. There is no requirement or benefit to carbohydrates. There is not “too much protein” in a raw diet. It is the perfect amount of
protein when fed as nature designed.

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Tags: carnivores, chronic ear infections, clean dog ears, common allergen, dog allergies, dog health problems, dog nutrition, dog problems, ear infections, natural diet, raw feeding, yeast infections, zymox

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Dog Allergies: Itching and Yeast Infections, No Longer Kibble Fed

IdeaMan21 | April 3rd, 2009

My dog is a 10 year old fixed female. When we first adopted her in ‘05
she didn’t seem to have any allergies but did come to us with a yeast
infection in her ears. We were feeding her Purina, once she started
itching herself to the point of opening her skin up and telling my parents that we HAD to switch food we did.

We switched to Diamond Naturals (no corn, wheat or soy), she did much better for a while but we ended up switching to Nutro Naturals because we had adopted 2 other dogs and the Diamond got to be expensive.

She was itchy on the Nutro and one of my other dogs was breaking out in hives due to the soy bean oil in that. So my mother decided to try Lassie Natural Way, she never did good on that but got a bit better on 1/2 raw 1/2 kibble.

During the course ALL of this she had another 3 ear infections, two yeast and one bacteria. We would get her the meds and it would clear up for a few days and slowly get worse. She constantly had hives all over her body but it was worse on some days.

I guess it was about 3 months ago that we went off of kibble all together, her diet is about 90% deer but I figure that is better then getting the same kibble crap day in day out. She got quite a bit better after that but still had hives, someone told me that it may be from dairy in her diet (she’s hypothyroid and got her pills wrapped in cheese).

We removed the cheese and the hives went away but she is still very itchy, her skin is red. She’s still very yeasty, she had a yeast infection between her toes that I was able to clear up with Gentain Violet. Her ears are still yeasty but I haven’t been able to try the “Blue ear power” in them yet because I don’t have the Boric acid.

She takes 1mg of Thyrozine 2x a day and 1 Natures Bounty Acidophilus a day, she gets them wrapped in raw chicken now. She does NOT take anything for heartworm or fleas currently.

What may help her??

A couple of ideas/questions. If she is eating mainly deer, she is probably not getting enough fat in her diet. Are you using any fish or salmon oil (great anti-inflammatory)? Are you certain she is on the
appropriate thyroid supplement dosage? If she needs probiotics, I’d get one with several strains of bacteria…much more efficient than just acidophilus.

I’d be very careful with the blue power ear treatment. I know people swear by it but it is quite harsh and if her ears are irritated at all, it is going to hurt. White vinegar and water will kill yeast…again vinegar can hurt if there is irritation, but you can dilute it down to 5% or less.

Yeast is difficult to deal with when it has gone on so long and been treated with all the various antibiotics and drugs which create a
vicious circle and don’t ever cure it! But you are on the right track with feeding raw…just make sure she is getting plenty of meat and fat, no other treats, maybe make some adjustments in her supplements.

Thanks for the reply, the deer isn’t marbled with fat but most of the time there is a small amount attached. The batch of deer that I just started feeding on Saturday is fatter, I guess that is because of it being mid winter.

As for the salmon or fish oil, I gave her that for a couple weeks but I’m confused about it. Some say to give 1000mg and others say to give 4 or 5000mg. Plus vitamin E?? How much of that needs to be given?

Her thyroid was last tested 6 months ago but will be retested again in
the next couple months, we had been testing it every 4 months but once the amount leveled off the vet didn’t test as often. In October 05 she was on a total of .8mg a day but is now down to .2 per day. As for the probiotics, I don’t know if she NEEDS them, but my mother hoped that it would help with her itchiness.

I had tried the vinegar and water before but it seemed to make her ears worse? She’s never been on oral antibiotics, the meds for her ears were drops. After we got her she probably should have been put
on them though, her spay incision got infected. The vet just said to
wash it with hand soap, it healed well but took forever too.

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Tags: dog allergies, dog health problems, dog health questions, itchy skin, natural diet, raw feeding, senior dog, thyroid, yeast infections

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