Veterinary Guide to Canine Immune-Mediated Thrombocytopenia (ITP) 2025 🩺🐶
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Veterinary Guide to Canine Immune-Mediated Thrombocytopenia (ITP) 2025 🩺🐶
By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc
🧬 What Is ITP?
Immune-Mediated Thrombocytopenia (ITP) is an autoimmune condition where a dog’s immune system destroys its own platelets—essential for clotting. Without enough platelets, dogs develop spontaneous bruising, bleeding, and risk life-threatening hemorrhage. 🩸
📊 Primary vs Secondary ITP
- Primary ITP: Idiopathic—no clear underlying cause (~75% of cases).
- Secondary ITP: Triggered by infections (e.g., Ehrlichia, Babesia), drugs, vaccines, neoplasia, or other autoimmune diseases. 🔬
👀 Common Symptoms
- Pinpoint bruising (petechiae), especially on gums, belly, and ears 🩹
- Nosebleeds, blood in urine or stool, bleeding gums 🐽
- Lethargy, pale gums, weakness, collapse 🛏️
- Fever, inappetence, sometimes vomiting or coughing blood 🌡️
🧪 Diagnosis
- Platelet count: Usually <20,000/μL (normal is 150k–400k). 📉
- Rule out causes: CBC, chemistry, urinalysis, infectious disease testing, tick panels 🐞
- Bone marrow biopsy: In complex or non-regenerative cases 🔬
- Diagnosis of exclusion: No obvious trigger = primary ITP ❓
🛠️ Treatment
1. Hospital Support
- Strict cage rest to reduce bleeding risk 🛌
- Blood transfusions if anemia is severe 💉
- IV fluids and oxygen for critical cases 💧
2. Immunosuppressive Therapy
- Prednisone: First-line treatment—suppresses immune destruction 💊
- Vincristine: Speeds platelet recovery in emergencies 🚀
- Mycophenolate or cyclosporine: Used as steroid-sparing agents ⚖️
- IVIG or TPO agonists (romiplostim): For refractory cases 🧪
3. Treat Secondary Triggers
- Stop offending medications 💊
- Antibiotics or antiparasitic meds for infections 🦠
- Address underlying diseases or neoplasia 🧬
📈 Prognosis & Monitoring
- Survival to discharge ~75–90% with aggressive care ❤️🩹
- Relapse rate: 25–40%; taper immunosuppressives gradually 📆
- Monitor CBC weekly during treatment, then monthly 🧫
- Prognosis worse if GI bleeding, kidney injury, or no response to steroids 😢
🏠 Home Care Tips
- Prevent rough play or injury—dogs can bruise or bleed easily 🐕🦺
- Give meds consistently—never skip steroid doses ⏱️
- Watch for gum bleeding, blood in stool/urine, or new bruises 👀
- Stick to follow-up plan—rechecks are essential 🩺
📱 Ask A Vet Telehealth Features
- 📷 Upload photos of gum color, bruises, stool color for remote monitoring
- 📆 Medication reminders & taper tracking tools
- 🩸 CBC recheck scheduling with alert system
- 🍲 Woopf nutrition integration for antioxidant-rich immune support diets
- 🎁 Purrz Recovery Kit: pill organizers, rehydration gels, and soft bedding gear
🎓 Case Highlight: “Bella” the Beagle
Bella, a 6-year-old Beagle, presented with bruises and bleeding gums. Her platelet count was 7,000. After a transfusion and prednisone/vincristine combo, her platelets recovered in 5 days. She tapered off prednisone by month 5 and stayed stable with help from Ask A Vet monitoring. She now enjoys her daily walks again—bleed-free! 🐶💖
🔚 Final Thoughts
- ITP is serious but treatable—catch it early and act fast 💡
- Bruising and bleeding should always be evaluated quickly 🩸
- Immunosuppressives, transfusions, and rest are lifesaving 🛌💊
- Dogs can live full lives with monitoring and proactive care 🐾
- Ask A Vet is your partner for safe, smart recovery 📱
Dr Duncan Houston BVSc, founder of Ask A Vet. Download the Ask A Vet app for expert, 24/7 support through your dog’s ITP journey—from diagnosis to recovery and beyond 🐶📲