Back to Blog

Veterinary Guide to Panniculitis in Dogs (2025)🐶

  • 129 days ago
  • 4 min read
Veterinary Guide to Panniculitis in Dogs (2025)🐶

    In this article

Veterinary Guide to Panniculitis in Dogs (2025)🐶 

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

🔍 Introduction

Panniculitis is inflammation of the subcutaneous fat (panniculus). While uncommon, it can signal trauma, infection, autoimmune disease, or idiopathic origins. Timely diagnosis and treatment are key to avoiding complications. 🩺

💡 What Is Panniculitis?

  • Inflammation of the fat layer under the skin, often causing firm or soft nodules, sometimes ulcerated, which may drain oily or sanguinous fluid.
  • May be solitary or multifocal; systemic signs—fever, lethargy, inappetence—may wax and wane with lesion development.

⚠️ Causes & Risk Factors

  • Infectious: bacterial, fungal—requires culture to identify pathogens.
  • Non-infectious: trauma, injections, pancreatitis, autoimmune disease, vitamin E deficiency, drug reactions.
  • Sterile idiopathic: often idiopathic; Dachshunds, Miniature Poodles and Collies appear predisposed.

🚨 Clinical Signs

  • Firm or soft subcutaneous nodules on trunk, neck, flanks; may ulcerate or drain oily or bloody fluid.
  • Often non-painful, but systemic illness—fever, malaise, reduced appetite—is common.

🔬 Diagnostic Approach

  • Fine-needle aspiration or biopsy confirms panniculitis and rules out infection or neoplasia.
  • Culture of biopsy or aspirate rules out bacterial/fungal causes.
  • Clinicopathologic tests (CBC, chemistry, urinalysis) help identify systemic disease like pancreatitis or autoimmune disorders.

🛠 Treatment Strategies

  • Surgical excision: ideal for solitary nodules.
  • Infectious forms: treat underlying infection with appropriate antimicrobials.
  • Sterile idiopathic cases:
    • Immunosuppressive therapy—corticosteroids, cyclosporine, tetracycline + niacinamide—often effective.
    • Vitamin E supplementation may help mild cases.

📈 Prognosis & Follow‑Up

  • Prognosis is good when underlying cause is identified or idiopathic disease responds to therapy; sterile nodules often regress within weeks.
  • Recurrences occur in some cases and may require long-term therapy.
  • In systemic disease—like pancreatitis or IBD—treating that condition resolves panniculitis.

🛡 Prevention & Care Tips

  • Avoid unnecessary injections or trauma at predisposed sites.
  • Monitor and treat underlying diseases proactively (e.g., pancreatitis, IBD, autoimmune disease).
  • Breed screening for predisposed breeds; implement dietary support such as vitamin E supplementation.

🔧 Tools & Services

  • Ask A Vet App: 24/7 guidance on initial evaluation, biopsy decisions, treatment plans, and progress monitoring 📱

✅ Final Thoughts

Panniculitis in dogs can be a benign, surgically resolved issue or a marker of systemic illness. With accurate diagnostics, immunomodulatory or surgical therapy, and proactive follow-up, most dogs recover well. Tools like Ask A Vet support owners in managing this condition with confidence into 2025 and beyond. 🐾❤️

Download the Ask A Vet app today for expert support with skin nodules, biopsy planning, and long‑term care tracking. 📱💡

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