Summary of lectures
This lecture series provides a comprehensive exploration of complex and clinically significant conditions in veterinary dermatology, with an emphasis on diagnostic reasoning, evidence-based treatment, and practical case management for small-animal practitioners.
1. Adverse Food Reactions (AFRs)
This lecture reviews the pathophysiology, clinical presentation, and diagnostic challenges associated with food-related dermatoses in dogs and cats. Participants will learn to differentiate AFRs from environmental allergies, design and monitor effective elimination diet trials, interpret conflicting clinical responses, and manage long-term nutritional therapy.
2. Dermatological Emergencies
In general, skin disease is a common presentation in small animal, first opinion veterinary practice and it tends to have an insidious onset, requiring long-term management by both practitioners and clients. However, there are a handful of dermatopathies that occur acutely causing striking skin lesions and/or systemic signs. These emergency dermatopathies are not regularly seen, thus the literature is minimal and practitioners may not be familiar with their aetiology, clinical appearance, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis. This lecture covers conditions requiring rapid recognition and intervention, including life-threatening or rapidly progressive skin diseases, highlighting stabilization strategies, diagnostic priorities, and therapeutics that can significantly alter outcomes in critically affected patients.
3. Feline Cutaneous Lymphoma
Cutaneous lymphoma in the cat is a rare but life-threatening neoplasm. Because of the similar presentation to other diseases, feline cutaneous lymphoma can present a diagnostic challenge and warrants inclusion in the differential diagnosis list of many dermatology cases; in this lecture we will review the current knowledge of the condition and the options for treatment, including both local and systemic therapies.
4. Autoimmune Skin Diseases in Cats
Participants will explore the spectrum of autoimmune and immune-mediated dermatologic disorders affecting feline patients, including pemphigus foliaceus, and rarer vesiculobullous diseases. The lecture emphasizes recognition of characteristic lesions, appropriate confirmatory testing, and current best practices in immunosuppressive therapy, monitoring, and supportive care. Special considerations related to feline pharmacology and comorbidities will also be highlighted.