One gender may be more susceptible to
alopecia over the other.
She had
alopecia over most of her skin, but primarily the trunk.
Not exact matches
I can't find this info anywhere, and all I know is that I am getting worse.Been on a paleo diet and things got worse, like me developing carpal tunnel syndrome, mctd, shortness of breath in a daily basis for 1 year and a half, excruciating back pain that stops me from moving,
alopecia areata coming back, depression and so on I have been taking stress response by gaia, selenium and other things with little help.Really don't know what else to do.I'm still 20 lb overweight even though my tsh went down.While my tsh went down, my antibodies went up from
over 500 to
over 700 now being on a grain and dairy free diet.While on natural thyroid my mind and body were so much better, but now supposedly are not good for me.My doc told me he could loose his license if he would prescribe that to me, which I know is lie.
If, however, your dog starts to lose patches of fur or if his coat seems to be thinning all
over, it could be a sign of a problem — it could be
alopecia.
If your dog's skin symptoms consist of just mild flaking or itching, then the home treatment described above to cure dog dry skin is appropriate.If the condition is worsening
over time, or if you see symptoms such as redness, hair loss (
alopecia), or if there are oozing lesions, these are signals that it is time to visit a veterinarian who can prescribe medications that can reduce skin inflammation (steroids), treat dog skin infection (antibiotics), or to help with itch.
The hair loss, known as
alopecia, occurs
over the torso.
Other symtpoms include hair loss (traumatic
alopecia), usually due to your cat
over grooming, miliary dermatitis (skin with collections of pronounced red bumps), eosinophilic plaques (well - defined, raised, ulcerated and extremely pruritic lesions that occur on the skin of cats, usually on the abdomen or hindlegs) and caling and shedding of the skin and usually accompanied by redness (exfoliative dermatitis).
Those cases need to be differentiated from stress induced
over grooming (psychogenic
alopecia although wikipedia is confusing the two issues).