Any vets on the board?

civildawg88

Active member
Aug 22, 2012
2,282
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Dogs also get in a habit of doing it. My small dog does it after eating usually. If it's not causing sores or rashes, I wouldn't worry about it
 

Lettuce

Well-known member
Oct 16, 2012
4,525
997
113
I have a half pit half lab. When I rescued her, she would spend hours chewing and licking her feet. Vet put her on apoquel and it’s changed her life. It’s expensive, they have to take it everyday but it’s made her be able to enjoy life. I could tell her allergies were making her crazy.

Her coat is now perfect and she’s turned out to be the best investment I’ve ever made
 
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TrueMaroonGrind

Well-known member
Jan 6, 2017
3,696
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Our dog did this for a while. First it was allergies, then it became a nervous tick. We got the allergies under control and eventually she stopped after a month or two. I think we gave her some puppy Xanex at some point but I don’t think it helped much.
 

1msucub

Active member
Oct 3, 2004
1,993
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1. It’s LIKELY some type of allergy…it’s extremely common for them to manifest first as feet licking.
2. Take her to your local vet so they can examine for other signs that may help pinpoint what TYPE of allergy it may be.
3. Treatment can range from antihistamines or steroids (cheap) to Apoquel (pills-expensive) to Cytopoint (injection-expensive) to specialty hypoallergenic foods (criminally expensive).
4. No matter what anyone tells you, the ONLY WAY to definitively diagnose what she’s allergic to is through skin testing. That’s expensive and a commitment, but it’s the gold standard. Just the way it is with allergies.
5. It CAN be behavioral….if so, all bets are off. Treating behavioral issues in pets is voodoo….there are a laundry list of things and drugs to treat them with. Pray it’s allergies.
6. Avoid Google. It’s a bottomless rabbit hole.
 
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oh yeah

Member
Aug 28, 2017
205
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1. It’s LIKELY some type of allergy…it’s extremely common for them to manifest first as feet licking.
2. Take her to your local vet so they can examine for other signs that may help pinpoint what TYPE of allergy it may be.
3. Treatment can range from antihistamines or steroids (cheap) to Apoquel (pills-expensive) to Cytopoint (injection-expensive) to specialty hypoallergenic foods (criminally expensive).
4. No matter what anyone tells you, the ONLY WAY to definitively diagnose what she’s allergic to is through skin testing. That’s expensive and a commitment, but it’s the gold standard. Just the way it is with allergies.
5. It CAN be behavioral….if so, all bets are off. Treating behavioral issues in pets is voodoo….there are a laundry list of things and drugs to treat them with. Pray it’s allergies.
6. Avoid Google. It’s a bottomless rabbit hole.
Well said.
 

jwtorch

New member
Jun 15, 2023
11
2
3
My dog (mutt) started doing that all of a sudden when he was about 6 or 7. My nephew (vet) asked if I'd changed food, shampoo, etc but I hadn't. Think he gave him a steroid shot a couple of times & it finally went away thankfully. He still gnaws at himself some but not enough to be a problem.
 

GloryDawg

Well-known member
Mar 3, 2005
14,881
5,999
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Vet Doggo Escaping GIF - Vet Doggo Escaping Run GIFs
 
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OG Goat Holder

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
8,281
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So I watched a couple of Dr Pol episodes tonight. Appears to be anxiety or boredom.
 
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