Understanding Pododermatitis in Dogs: Causes, Signs, and Management
Pododermatitis refers to inflammation of the skin on a dog's feet or paws. This condition doesn't just cause discomfort—it's often a sign that something deeper is going on with your dog’s health. Let's explore what pododermatitis looks like, why it happens, and how you can help your dog feel better.
What Does Pododermatitis Look Like?
The signs of pododermatitis can range from subtle to severe. You might notice:
- Redness and swelling between the toes or around the pads
- Painful sores or ulcers
- Nodules (small lumps) or scabs
- Discharge (sometimes with odor)
- Lameness or reluctance to walk
- Persistent licking or chewing at the feet
- Hair loss and dark staining of fur (from saliva or yeast)
- Thickened pads and crusting in chronic cases
If all four feet are affected—especially with nailbed involvement—this could point toward an immune-mediated disease. Sometimes only one paw is involved, especially if a foreign body is present.
Main Causes of Pododermatitis
This condition isn’t a disease itself but a symptom with many possible causes:
- Infections: Bacterial (like Staphylococcus pseudintermedius), fungal (Malassezia yeast; ringworm), and parasitic (Demodex mites) infections can inflame paw tissue. Infections often complicate other underlying problems.
- Allergies: Environmental (atopic dermatitis), food allergies, and contact allergies can trigger itching, redness, swelling, and secondary infections. Allergic pododermatitis often shows brownish staining from saliva or yeast.
- Foreign Bodies: Grass seeds, splinters, or thorns may penetrate paw skin. These cause local swelling, pain, persistent licking/chewing, lumps that may drain pus or blood, and sometimes granulomas.
- Hormonal Diseases: Hypothyroidism and Cushing’s disease suppress immunity or slow skin healing—making secondary infections more likely.
- Immune-Mediated/Autoimmune Conditions: Diseases like pemphigus foliaceus and lupus can cause blisters, crusts, thickening of paw skin—even affecting all four feet and nailbeds.
- Conformational Issues: Some breeds with splayed feet or heavy bodies put abnormal pressure on their paws leading to chronic inflammation and sores.
- Tumors: Cancers such as squamous cell carcinoma or mast cell tumors may appear as nodules/ulcers on one or more paws.
- Trauma: Burns, abrasions from rough surfaces—or excessive exercise—can break down paw skin and allow infection in.
- Metabolic/Genetic Disorders: Conditions like hepatocutaneous syndrome or zinc-responsive dermatoses may show up as scaling/crusting pads.
- Behavioral Causes: Compulsive licking (acral lick granuloma) perpetuates lesions through self-trauma.
Certain breeds—including Bulldogs, Boxers, Shar Peis, German Shepherds, Retrievers (Golden/Labrador), Spaniels—are more prone to pododermatitis due to genetics or body structure. Obesity and orthopedic issues also increase risk by altering weight distribution over the paws.
The Diagnostic Process
Your veterinarian will start with a thorough history and physical exam. To pinpoint the cause(s), they may recommend tests like:
- Skin scrapings/hair plucks: Check for Demodex mites
- Cytology: Look for bacteria/yeast/inflammatory cells under a microscope
- Cultures/sensitivity tests: Identify microbes for targeted treatment—especially if infections are deep/persistent
- Tissue biopsy/histopathology: Rule out cancer/autoimmune disease in chronic/severe cases
- X-rays/ultrasound: Detect foreign bodies/bone changes if needed
- Boodwork/endocrine testing: Screen for hormonal/metabolic causes like hypothyroidism/Cushing’s disease
- Diets/allergy testing/trials: Investigate allergic triggers when appropriate
Treatment Options for Pododermatitis
Treatment depends entirely on what's causing the problem—and often involves tackling both primary causes and secondary infections:
- Bacterial/yeast infections: Treated with topical washes/shampoos/wipes/creams plus oral antibiotics/antifungals if needed. Deep/recurrent cases often require long courses guided by culture results.
- Allergic/immune-mediated disease: Managed with anti-inflammatory drugs (corticosteroids/ciclosporin/oclacitinib), immunomodulators, antihistamines; regular medicated foot baths help too. Avoiding known triggers is key when possible.
- Mite infestations/parasitic causes: Specific anti-parasitic drugs are used (e.g., isoxazolines).
- Foreign bodies: Surgical removal plus wound care; single-paw involvement with draining lump is suggestive here.
- Hormonal/metabolic disorders: Treat underlying issue (thyroid meds for hypothyroidism; managing Cushing’s; zinc supplementation/diet change).
- Tumors/neoplasia:Surgical removal plus further oncology care if malignant.
- Anatomic/conformational issues:Paw protection boots; weight management; exercise modification; surgery for severe/unresponsive cases.
- Pain/supportive care:Pain control; keeping paws clean/dry; Epsom salt soaks/cold compresses/hair trimming/gentle wipes as advised by your vet.





