Small Animal Dermatology, 3rd edition

(Tina Sui) #1

chapter 14 Behavioral or Self-Injurious Dermatoses......................


DEFINITION/OVERVIEW


 Self-injurious behavior or compulsion refers to any voluntary action resulting in


self-damage.


 Compulsive disorders are characterized by repetitive, persistent, or sustained behav-


iors in excess of what is required for normal function, especially if severe enough to
interfere with normal function.

 The term obsessive-compulsive disorder may not be appropriate; the cognitive pro-


cess producing the behavior is unknown in animals.


 Cutaneous compulsions (psychodermatoses) often have an underlying organic dis-


ease or trigger.


 Diagnosis and treatment include identifying the underlying trigger, treating secondary


dermatoses, and modifying behavior to prevent recurrence; medications are a helpful
adjunct if anxiety interferes with normal activities or learning.

ETIOLOGY/PATHPHYSIOLOGY


 Dermatoses may be initiated by a pathology (e.g., an allergy, an injury, arthritis, or a


cutaneous growth), with subsequent self-injury causing persistence or worsening of
lesions; habituation may result.

 Secondary behavioral dermatoses: effects of skin disease on a patient’s wellbeing (e.g.,


lethargy/exhaustion from scratching); treatment of the primary cause should resolve
symptoms.

 Cutaneous sensory dermatoses: self-injury produced due to abnormal sensations in


the skin but in the absence of identifiable pathology or disease.


 Psychodermatoses: self-injury produced in the absence of underlying sensory, skin or


other pathology; often a diagnosis of exclusion; stressful situations, however, can act
as flares for pruritus and self-injurious behaviors.

 Compulsive disorders have been linked with conditions that produce frustration, fear,


conflict, and anxiety.


 Skin is one of the channels of communication through which anxiety is modulated.


Blackwell’s Five-Minute Veterinary Consult Clinical Companion: Small Animal Dermatology, Third Edition.
Karen Helton Rhodes and Alexander H. Werner.
©2018 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Published 2018 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.


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