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by Micky D on 06 August 2009 - 14:08
Thanks for all the help. An update - the spots are dried up. So far, so good. She's eating Taste of the Wild fish with canned salmon (thinks she's died and gone to heaven) and we dodged the vet and his syringe full of steroids.
Micky
Micky
by Prager on 06 August 2009 - 15:08
You know when the wet hey gets hot? That is bacteria. Hot spot is similar. Small injury caused often by fleas starts oozing and clamping of the hair together. Dog's licking it, adds moisture. That succession of events may cause hot spot.
I treat it like this: Clip the hair, wash it aggressively with 16 oz of water with teaspoon of bleach, wash it until it is not slippery. Then wash the area with antibacterial soup. Rinse it. Pack it with Neosporene . Use Neosporene every day until gone. Get rid of the fleas.
I have found out that peroxide causes microscopic burns of the tissue which is then getting necrotic. I would not use hydrogen peroxide.
GMO.
Prager (Hans)
http://www.alpinek9.com
I treat it like this: Clip the hair, wash it aggressively with 16 oz of water with teaspoon of bleach, wash it until it is not slippery. Then wash the area with antibacterial soup. Rinse it. Pack it with Neosporene . Use Neosporene every day until gone. Get rid of the fleas.
I have found out that peroxide causes microscopic burns of the tissue which is then getting necrotic. I would not use hydrogen peroxide.
GMO.
Prager (Hans)
http://www.alpinek9.com
by von sprengkraft on 10 August 2009 - 15:08
I agree with Hans.....no peroxide. I have done most of the remedies offered. Then I found the miracle....Schreiners Herbal Remedy. Just saturate the hot spot ASAP...no clipping, no washing, moisture is not good for moist exzema. If schreiners is applied soon enough...no hair loss. Unbelievable!! You can buy it at saddlerys or horse supply catalogs.
Debbie
Debbie
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