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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

Sarcoptic vs. Demodectic Mange in Dogs

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February 22, 2012 / (14) comments


I commonly get questions from owners after their dogs have been recently diagnosed with mange. I usually get blank looks to my inevitable response, "What type of mange?" Their answers are typically, "There’s more than one?" and "Does it matter?" On both counts, the answer is "yes."

 

Here’s a primer on the two most common types of mange in dogs — sarcoptic and demodectic — in compare and contrast style.

 

 

The Cause

 

Sarcoptic Mange — infection of the skin with the microscopic, parasitic mite Sarcoptes scabei. Sarcoptic mange is contagious, and most dogs catch the disease via direct contact with an infected individual. People and cats can also be transiently infected.

 

Demodectic Mange — overgrowth of mites, Demodex sp., that are normally found in small numbers in a dog’s skin. Demodectic mange is usually diagnosed in young dogs without fully functioning immune systems, or in dogs that are otherwise immunocompromised. Demodectic mange is not contagious.

 

 

Typical Symptoms

 

Sarcoptic Mange — extreme itchiness with hair loss and red scaly skin that typically start in sparsely-haired areas like the ear flaps, elbows, and abdomen, but can spread to the entire body without effective treatment.

 

Demodectic Mange — patchy hair loss with relatively normal looking skin underneath is the hallmark of the most common, localized form of the demodectic mange. Mild to moderate itching may or may not be present. In more severe, generalized cases, hair loss may be wide-spread, the skin obviously abnormal, and itchiness severe.

 

 

Diagnosis

 

Sarcoptic Mange — if skin scrapings reveal the mite, a diagnosis of sarcoptic mange is easily reached. However, dogs may react so intensely to a small number of mites that skin scrapings can be falsely negative. A tentative diagnosis is often reached based on a dog’s clinical signs and response to treatment.

 

Demodectic Mange — multiple skin scrapings usually will reveal the presence of higher than normal numbers of mites.

 

 

Treatment

 

Sarcoptic Mange — dips, injections, oral drugs, and spot-on treatments can all be used to treat sarcoptic mange. Determining which option is best depends on a dog’s breed, health, and other considerations, but my favorite treatment is selamectin because of its safety, efficacy, and ease of use. Every dog in the home should be treated to prevent animals from reinfesting each other.

 

Demodectic Mange — mild cases of localized demodectic mange often resolve without any treatment when a dog’s immune system becomes better able to control mite numbers. Antibiotics, drugs that kill the mites, and medicated dips and ointments can all be prescribed in more severe cases. If an underlying cause of immunosuppression can be identified, it should also be dealt with.

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Image: Alice Mary Herden Vision-Vault LLC / via Shutterstock

 

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COMMENTS (14)
1
Two!
by TheOldBroad on 02/22/2012 07:07am

I wonder how many owners realize there are two types of mange.

This is definitely information to tuck away and keep.

2
Thank-you Doctor Coates
by kay morris on 02/22/2012 11:09am

Great imformation......What is Red mange ?....growing-up, I was told a real bad Mange or is this a old wife's tale? just wondering ?

by Dr. Jennifer Coates on 02/22/2012 11:22am

Red mange is another name for demodectic mange.

3
Thank-you Doctor Coates
by kay morris on 02/22/2012 12:10pm

I've was told, this is carried by The Mother Dog in her Blood. Passed on to her female pups ? or is this a old Wifes tale.

by Dr. Jennifer Coates on 02/22/2012 03:05pm

Just an old wives' tale, although some dogs do inherit a genetic tendency for demodicosis from their parents.

4
Good info
by dinosmom on 02/22/2012 12:18pm

Working with shelter dogs I've explained this many times. Love the simplicity you present info with when possible. Good blog....keep it going!

5
Red Mange
by kay morris on 02/22/2012 12:39pm

So many Dogs have been put down for this, by many Vets. In the past. This I know to be true.....makes me sick, So Thankful there is now a cure for all Mange (Mites) ! Great Job, if it is a Bug we can kill it. You Gals and
Guys have come a long way.

6
great post
by alice in lala land on 02/22/2012 05:39pm

straight forward medical advice .. good going

7
Smart
by Drken on 02/23/2012 10:32am

After the responses to your recent posts on the legal value of our pets and whether or not pets can exhibit love, it was a good idea to retreat and concentrate on veterinary medical facts.

8
Thanks
by My5beagles on 02/23/2012 04:59pm

Thanks for a good post. After dealing with a horrible case of demodectic mange in Lilly last year I am now quite versed in it. But I am always glad for more useful info. I enjoy your thought provoking posts.

9
Very informative
by PetMom1 on 02/23/2012 09:01pm

Dr. Coates, even though we do not have a dog, this was a very informative article which I will save.
In light of the many comments on your last article, I hope that you really will examine your opinion on whether or not cats and horses are capable of love.
Thank you for very informative and useful article on the subject of mange.

10
Not dogs but . . .
by stefanio on 02/29/2012 12:52am

For the last year a rash of mysterious maladies has afflicted my 5 kitty housemates. First, around this time last year, bloody diarrhea and innappetance with fever in one cat required hospitalization; no sooner was she out than my foster cat whipped up the same symptoms. The first symptomatic cat tested positive for giardia antibodies, although not fecal evidence (oocytes?) so we treated the entire house with panacur for many weeks, and fluids for the sick ones. Not to mention crazy house cleaning. Then, no sooner was this bout calming down than crazy itching started and wouldn't stop. Everyone, itching and biting themselves like mad. Patches of skin gone.

Now, around that time, I'd had a flood in my basement and also "rescued" a wild bird that I was briefly in contact with and drove in my car to the wildlife "rescue." And. that same week, chimney sweeps swept a dead bird out of my flue. I myself came down with crazy itching, later diagnosed and successfully treated as "scabies" -- ewww. Not sure in retrospect if that is really what it was . . . .

The vet didn't think my cats could catch my scabies but they sure seemed to have symptoms with the crazy scratching, biting, bare patches. These symptoms started about a week after I started my own treatment for scabies. I gave the cats Revolution applications, to little effect. Went to a derm vet who could find no mites even though I persisted in thinking that was the problem. After all, that had been my problem supposedly, and they became symptomatic after me.

We resorted to lime sulfur baths. Everyone. Every week. Finally, 6 times 5 (30) sulfur baths later, everyone seemed to kick it.

Can you imagine 30 sulfur baths? 1 per cat per week for 5 cats for 6 weeks? I was sure hating life.

So, I don't know about cats and sarcoptic mange, but during this ordeal, the derm vet said something about bird mites. I looked online and there is some scary stuff out there about bird mites. It would make sense after the bird rescue, although I never brought the bird in the house.

I still am not sure what the whole ordeal was about, but since the scabies meds worked on me (albeit, after 3 treatments instead of 1) and the cats seemed to catch it, I assumed it was "sarcoptes scabei." If that's the case, it was much more than a transient infection for them. If that's not the case, then we may all have had some hard-to-kick bird mites.

You never ever ever want those. People have apparently moved out of their homes, tented and fumigated entire houses in attempts to get rid of them.

11
Mange
by Traci Orozco on 05/09/2013 10:01pm

Do dogs lick the spots. My dog was licking his paw tops til they would bleed. I switched his food to natural grain free thinking that it was a corn allergy. But It has spread to the tail base. Any hints as to what it might be?

by Dr. Jennifer Coates on 05/10/2013 10:41am

Dogs can lick affected areas, more so with sarcoptic versus demodectic mange. This list of possible causes for your dog's symptoms is long and will require a veterinary visit and some diagnostic tests to get to the bottom of. Good luck!

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About fully vetted

Jennifer Coates, DVM

Photo of Dr Coates

Image credit: Jim Piraino

...graduated with honors from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 1999. In the years since, she has practiced veterinary medicine in Virginia, Wyoming, and Colorado. She is the author of several books about veterinary medicine and animal care, including the Dictionary of Veterinary Terms: Vet-Speak Deciphered for the Non-Veterinarian. Dr. Coates also writes short stories that focus on the strength and importance of the human-animal bond, and freelance articles relating to a variety of animal care and veterinary topics. Dr. Coates lives in Fort Collins, Colorado with her husband, daughter, and various species of pets.

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