Symptoms and treatments of dogs
About 70% of tinea dysfunction is caused by Microsporidium canis, and 20% is caused by Microsporidium gypsum-like. Large lesions often manifest as annular scale spots, residual damaged hair roots in the lesions, or complete hair loss in the annular spots. The course of the disease is most active, including blisters or small pustules. In severe infection, hair loss, erythema or scab may occur on the body.
The first treatment is greyofomycin. This drug inhibits fungal development in the deepest hair roots. Applying iodine lotion to the whole body on the seventh and fourteenth days of treatment with antifungal or greyfulvin can alleviate or eliminate infections that spread to other parts of the body or other animal or humans. After clinical recovery, some of the hair on the skin may still have live bacteria, so it is best to cut off the hair to remove the final source of the infection.