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ModeratePrevalence: Common across all breeds

Allergies in Glen of Imaal Terriers

Glen of Imaal Terriers can develop allergies — environmental (atopic dermatitis), food-related, or flea allergy. Allergic dogs develop itchy, inflamed skin rather than the sneezing typical in humans. While any dog can develop allergies, awareness of the signs leads to faster diagnosis and treatment.

Prevalence

Common across all breeds

Typical Onset

1-3 years for environmental allergies; any age for food allergies

Severity

Moderate

Symptoms to Watch For

If your Glen of Imaal Terrier shows any of these signs, monitor closely and consult your veterinarian.

persistent itching, licking, and scratching
red, inflamed skin, especially on paws, belly, ears, and armpits
recurring ear infections
hair loss from chronic scratching
red-brown saliva staining on paws from licking
recurring hot spots or skin infections

Risk Factors

  • genetic predisposition
  • environmental allergen exposure (pollen, dust mites, mold)
  • food proteins (chicken, beef, dairy are most common triggers)
  • compromised skin barrier function
  • flea exposure (flea allergy dermatitis)

Diagnosis

Intradermal skin testing (gold standard for environmental allergies) injects small amounts of allergens and measures reactions. Serum allergy testing (blood test) is less accurate but more accessible. Food allergy: 8-12 week elimination diet trial with a novel protein or hydrolyzed diet is the only reliable test. Cytology and culture of skin/ear infections identify secondary bacteria and yeast. Skin scraping rules out mites.

Treatment

Environmental allergies: Apoquel (oclacitinib) or Cytopoint (lokivetmab injection) for itch relief; immunotherapy (allergy shots or sublingual drops) for long-term desensitization; regular bathing with medicated shampoo. Food allergies: strict elimination diet to identify trigger proteins, then lifelong avoidance. Treating secondary infections with appropriate antibiotics/antifungals. Omega-3 fatty acid supplementation supports skin barrier.

Prevention

Early diversified diet exposure may reduce food allergy risk. Regular bathing removes environmental allergens from coat. Omega-3 supplementation supports skin health. Maintain flea prevention year-round (flea allergy is the most common type). Air purifiers reduce indoor allergen load.

When to See a Vet

See your vet if your pet scratches persistently, develops recurring ear infections, or has chronic skin redness. Untreated allergies lead to chronic skin infections, ear damage, and significant quality-of-life reduction. Modern allergy treatments are highly effective.

Other Health Conditions in Glen of Imaal Terriers

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