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  1. 13 sty 2023 · Symptoms may include itchiness, swelling, hair loss, skin flaking, and more. Learning to recognize various equine skin diseases is important to take the appropriate actions needed to resolve the problem or to manage the horse to keep them more comfortable.

  2. Although some skin diseases are clearly distressing for the horse (for example, sweet itch and pyoderma), many are often unconcerning to the affected horse (for example, urticaria and linear keratosis), but may be a major cosmetic concern to the owner.

  3. The answer depends on whether the spot or bump in question is caused by a bacterial, fungal or viral infection, an insect bite, sunburn, allergic reaction, bruise, abrasion or any number of assaults the world can throw at a horse. Equine skin conditions are often first noticed during grooming.

  4. 30 maj 2015 · Skin disease in horses is a common and potentially challenging clinical problem. Information pertaining to skin disease is lacking in horses when compared with that in other companion animal species. Certainly, both horse-specific and location-specific patterns are present, but these can often be confounded by other factors.

  5. You should be prepared to provide as much of the following information as possible: 1) the primary complaint; 2) length of time the problem has been present; 3) age at which the skin disease started; 4) presence and severity of pruritus (itching, licking, rubbing, scratching, or chewing behaviors); 6) what the skin looked like when the disease ...

  6. 21 sie 2024 · Skin layer 1: epidermis. Diagram of the three layers of the skin. The epidermis is the outermost layer of the skin and it forms a thick, protective barrier made up of proteins and cells. The main protein of the epidermis is keratin — the same protein that is present in the skin, hair and fingernails of humans and other mammals.

  7. 23 maj 2017 · Signs may include mild redness, flaky and itchy skin, severe hair loss, skin thickening, pain and occasionally skin sloughing. Horses often get opportunistic secondary infections with itchy skin, especially horses with allergic skin conditions (Figure 3).

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