Effects of prolonged use
Prolonged use of steroids for diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease can result in the more chronic side effects seen
in the skin, such as tearing of the skin in flexural areas, comedones, hemorrhagic blisters and calcinosis cutis.
I have had owners produce comedones with severe follicular keratosis in the skin of the groin using topical steroids, assuming
that more of the topical steroid would fix the problem, when in fact it was creating the problem.
I am careful when dispensing any topical steroid with a greater potency than hydrocortisone 1 percent because most owners
tend to overuse topicals. Medium- to long-acting steroids such as triamcinolone or fluocinonide in either an alcohol base
or ointment base tend to be absorbed well across the skin, sometimes producing effects similar to orally administered steroids.
If anything stronger than a 1 percent hydrocortisone is dispensed, it should be done so with specific instructions and time
limits of use. A similar problem occurs when owners use potent prescription steroids of their own on the pet such as diprolene
or lidex — both medium- to high-potency steroids.
Besides the hyperkeratosis, thinning of the skin and either focal or diffuse alopecia, some patients with chronic steroid
use present with the clinical sign of a nonresolving bacterial pyoderma. It is not surprising in some patients that, in spite
of antibiotics for the bacterial pyoderma, the patient will not clear if also on steroids despite at low dose. Again, it is
the steroid sensitivity of the individual that comes into play.
Be careful not to fall into the trap of using steroid along with antibiotics to treat a pyoderma. What occurs is that initially
the steroid clears the inflammation associated with the pyoderma but then, two to three weeks later, the pyoderma is back
even worse. This is due to the steroid effect of immunosuppression on the skin. This point is actually used in human dermatologists
when they are unsure of a dermatophyte infection in humans. They will dispense a combination steroid/antifungal topical. If
dermatophytes are present, the steroid will cause fungal overgrowth due to steroid immunosuppression. It is then easier to
confirm the fungal infection by KOH preps. In veterinary medicine, it is not unusual to see a bacterial pyoderma presenting
as a hemorrhagic blister in patients on steroids.
The important point to remember in a patient presenting with recurrent pyoderma, thinning skin, comedones, calcinosis cutis,
alopecia either focal or diffuse or other nondermatologic signs of iatrogenic Cushing's disease is to consider whether any type of steroid was used in the past six months.
I have had some patients take up to six months to resolve dermatologic effects of steroids on the skin. Of course, each presentation
is different, depending upon the patient, type of steroid and duration of therapy.
Some veterinarians think that chronic low-dose steroid is without problems, but remember that the effects of steroid are cumulative
over time. In treating the effects of steroid on the skin, the most important treatment is to discontinue the steroid. There
are no quick fixes to eliminating the effects of steroid on the skin; one must just wait it out. Unfortunately, owners will
fall victim to advertisers who claim their products work for dry skin. But the dry skin resulting from steroid use will regress
over time. Whenever possible, alternate long-term therapies without steroid should be pursued for chronic diseases that may
initially be steroid-responsive.
Dr. Jeromin is a pharmacist and veterinary dermatologist in private practice in Cleveland, Ohio. She is a 1989 graduate of
The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine and an adjunct professor at Case Western Reserve University's College
of Medicine in Cleveland.
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