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  2. Symptoms of Mastitis in Dogs. In your dog’s case, the age and her history mean that mammary infection is much more likely than cancer. That does not mean that mammary cancer can be ruled out ...

  3. A Comprehensive Guide to Navigating Your Dog’s Pregnancy - AOL

    www.aol.com/comprehensive-guide-navigating-dog...

    When your pregnant dog is about to give birth, she will enter labor. For dogs, this occurs in three stages. ... Sometimes dogs get mastitis, or blocked milk ducts that then become infected. If ...

  4. Nonpuerperal mastitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonpuerperal_mastitis

    The term nonpuerperal mastitis describes inflammatory lesions of the breast that occur unrelated to pregnancy and breastfeeding. It is sometimes equated with duct ectasia , but other forms can be described.

  5. Mastitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastitis

    The lifetime risk for breast cancer is significantly reduced for women who were pregnant and breastfeeding. Mastitis episodes do not appear to influence lifetime risk of breast cancer. [citation needed] Mastitis does however cause great difficulties in diagnosis of breast cancer. Breast cancer may coincide with mastitis or develop shortly ...

  6. Mammary tumor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammary_tumor

    Female dogs who are not spayed or who are spayed later than the first heat cycle are more likely to develop mammary tumors. Dogs have an overall reported incidence of mammary tumors of 3.4 percent. Dogs spayed before their first heat have 0.5 percent of this risk, and dogs spayed after just one heat cycle have 8 percent of this risk. [1]

  7. Tylosin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tylosin

    In general, tylosin is licensed for the treatment of infections caused by organisms susceptible to the drug, but it has also been used as a treatment of colitis in small animals, as a growth promotant in food-producing animals, and as a way of reducing epiphora (tear staining) around the eyes of white-faced dogs. [2]

  8. Fading puppy syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fading_puppy_syndrome

    During their first few weeks of life, puppies are unable to regulate their own body temperature, and require a source of heat to stay warm. Due to their lack of an independent immune system, strict hygiene is beneficial, as is examining the mother for disease, such as mastitis or metritis, and viral infections such as Canine parvovirus or ...

  9. Dog skin disorders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_skin_disorders

    Dog with atopic dermatitis, with signs around the eye created by rubbing. Atopy is a hereditary [3] and chronic (lifelong) allergic skin disease. Signs usually begin between 6 months and 3 years of age, with some breeds of dog, such as the golden retriever, showing signs at an earlier age.