Back to Blog

Vet’s 2025 Guide to Hair Loss in Dogs – Causes, Diagnosis & Effective Care 🐶

  • 80 days ago
  • 5 min read
Vet’s 2025 Guide to Hair Loss in Dogs – Causes, Diagnosis & Effective Care 🐶

    In this article

Vet’s 2025 Guide to Hair Loss in Dogs – Causes, Diagnosis & Effective Care 🐶

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

💡 What Is Alopecia?

Alopecia refers to partial or complete hair loss, not to be confused with normal seasonal shedding. While shedding is cyclical and uniform, alopecia involves abnormal thinning, patchiness, or bald areas.

⚠️ When to Be Concerned

  • Any unusual, progressive, or itchy hair loss should prompt a vet visit.
  • Non-itchy patches may sometimes heal, but underlying issues should be ruled out.

🧩 Common Causes of Hair Loss

  • External parasites: Fleas, ticks, lice, & mites like Demodex and Sarcoptes—typically cause itching, redness, and patchy hair loss.
  • Infections: Bacterial (pyoderma) or fungal (ringworm) infections often lead to scabs, pustules, and oozing.
  • Allergies: Environmental, food, or insect bite allergies can cause itchy hair loss, especially on paws, belly, and face.
  • Hormonal disorders: Hypothyroidism and Cushing’s disease lead to symmetrical thinning, dull coat, and potential skin darkening.
  • Autoimmune or genetic conditions: Alopecia X, color-dilution alopecia, and breed-specific genetic forms—often permanent or recurrent.
  • Trauma & self‑trauma: Pressure sores, collars, or over-grooming from anxiety can damage follicles.
  • Seasonal flank alopecia: Non‑itchy, patterned patches in winter months—managed with melatonin.

🔬 Diagnosing Hair Loss

  • History & physical exam—location, pattern, itchiness
  • Skin scrapings, cytology, fungal cultures for parasites/infections
  • Bloodwork—to check hormones, thyroid, Cushing’s
  • Skin biopsy—for autoimmune or pattern alopecia cases

💊 Treatment Strategies

  • Parasite control: Topical or systemic treatment for fleas, mites, and ticks
  • Infection management: Antibiotics or antifungals as indicated
  • Allergy therapy: Antihistamines, corticosteroids, Apoquel, Cytopoint, immunotherapy
  • Hormonal treatments: Supplementation for hypothyroidism, mitigation of hypercortisolism
  • Genetic alopecia: Moisturizing shampoos, supplements; prevent breeding of carriers
  • Seasonal flank alopecia: Melatonin therapy; often cosmetic cases
  • Trauma prevention: Remove irritants, use protective gear

🏠 Home & Dietary Support

  • Use medicated shampoos—but wait for diagnostics before application
  • Ensure diet rich in high-quality protein and essential fatty acids
  • Maintain parasite prevention and regular grooming routines

📉 Prognosis & Follow‑up

Recovery depends on diagnosis: infections resolve in 1–3 weeks, allergies and hormones often need long-term management. Genetic and seasonal types may require lifelong monitoring.

📲 Tools for Pet Owners

  • Ask A Vet: Chat 24/7 for guidance on treatments, shampoos, and monitoring 🐾

🌟 Case Example

Case: Bella, a 4-year-old Cocker Spaniel, presented with symmetrical coat thinning and dull fur. Blood tests showed hypothyroidism. After starting levothyroxine and omega-3 supplements, her coat thickened within 8 weeks, and her symptoms resolved. 🐶✨

✅ Final Tips

  • Any unusual, itchy, or progressive hair loss merits a vet visit
  • Effective care depends on accurate identification of the cause—skin tests, workups, and biopsy if needed
  • Diet, parasite prevention, and home care support faster recovery
  • Some forms require long-term plans—genetic alopecia, seasonal patterns, and hormonal therapy
  • For help with monitoring protocols, supplements, or flares, download Ask A Vet today 🩺

📥 Need Expert Help?

If your dog is losing hair or showing skin irritation, download the Ask A Vet app for real‑time veterinary advice. Visit AskAVet

Dog Approved
Build to Last
Easy to Clean
Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted
Dog Approved
Build to Last
Easy to Clean
Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted