Veterinary Guide to Steatitis (Fat Necrosis) in Dogs (2025)🐶
In this article
Veterinary Guide to Steatitis (Fat Necrosis) in Dogs (2025)🐶
By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc
🔍 Introduction
Steatitis (also called nutritional or idiopathic fat necrosis) is inflammation and necrosis of adipose tissue. In dogs, it's uncommon and increasingly rare due to antioxidant-fortified diets. Early recognition and diagnosis are essential to prevent pain, systemic illness, and complications. 🩺
💡 What Is Steatitis?
- A painful inflammatory condition of fat tissue caused by oxidative damage, dietary or secondary to other diseases.
- Also known as “yellow fat disease” or pansteatitis, adipose becomes firm, yellowish, and painful.
⚠️ Causes
- Nutritional: diets high in unsaturated fats (fish-based, homemade) with low antioxidants—e.g., vitamin E.
- Vitamin E deficiency: a critical antioxidant to prevent fat peroxidation.
- Secondary to disease: pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer, hepatitis—local fat inflammation spreads.
- Infectious/immune-mediated/idiopathic: bacterial, fungal, trauma, cancer, radiation, or unknown.
🚨 Clinical Signs
- Painful, firm, subcutaneous nodules—yellowish fat masses in trunk, limbs, abdomen.
- Lethargy, fever, anorexia, weight loss, reluctance to move, joint/muscle pain.
- Occasionally, palpable abdominal or omental masses (mesenteric steatitis).
🔬 Diagnostic Work-Up
- Physical exam—painful nodules in fatty areas.
- Lab tests: CBC (inflammatory leukocytosis), chemistry, urinalysis, ionized calcium in granulomatous cases.
- Imaging (ultrasound/radiographs) for intra-abdominal masses.
- Fine-needle aspiration or biopsy with histopathology and culture—detects fat necrosis, inflammation, rules out infection/malignancy.
🛠 Treatment
- Nutritional: switch to balanced diets rich in vitamin E; avoid excessive unsaturated fats.
- Vitamin E supplementation: to combat oxidative damage.
- Anti-inflammatory/immunosuppressive therapy: corticosteroids, cyclosporine, tetracycline–niacinamide for sterile or granulomatous cases; pain management.
- Infectious cases: treat with antibiotics or antifungals guided by culture results.
- Surgery: excision for localized masses or mesenteric nodules causing discomfort or obstruction.
- Treat underlying disease: pancreatitis, hepatitis, or neoplasia if identified.
📈 Prognosis & Monitoring
- Good if nutritional and mild sterile cases are treated early.
- Granulomatous forms may include transient hypercalcemia—monitor ionized calcium.
- Recheck dogs in 3–6 weeks; adjust therapy based on response and labs.
- Prognosis worsens if underlying cancer, organ failure, or granulomatous changes are present.
🛡 Prevention & Owner Tips
- Feed high-quality commercial diets with antioxidants.
- Avoid excessive fish oil or homemade fatty meals without supplementing with vitamin E.
- Monitor older dogs and those with pancreatitis, hepatic disease, or on high-fat diets.
- Seek veterinary care if nodules, pain, fever, or appetite changes occur.
🔧 Tools & Support Services
- Ask A Vet App: 24/7 help with recognizing lumps, guided diagnostics, vitamin/pain dosing 📱
✅ Final Thoughts
Steatitis is uncommon but often painful in dogs. Early diagnosis through biopsy, diet adjustment, vitamin E supplementation, and anti-inflammatory therapy—plus treatment of any underlying disease—can resolve signs and offer good outcomes. Use Ask A Vet, ensure targeted care and monitoring into 2025. 🐾❤️
Download the Ask A Vet app today for expert support with fat inflammation, treatment planning, and follow-ups. 📱💡