Hi!
I have a 10-year-old Jack Russell Terrier, and for about three years now, she has been experiencing allergic reactions of an unknown cause.
I’m posting here in the hope that someone might be able to offer advice or a different perspective.
In 2024 (late April), she had a severe allergic reaction: her muzzle, paw pads, and vulva became swollen, and she developed hives all over her body. She was licking and scratching herself.
The reaction started around noon and worsened throughout the afternoon. We eventually gave her cortisone because the swelling and hives were not going away on their own, and by the evening, she was back to normal.
At the time, we thought it might have been her kibble, so we switched it.
The new kibble contains none of the ingredients from the previous one, but this year, around the same time (late April 2026), she had another allergic reaction—similar to the first one but milder. Her muzzle, three legs, and vulva swelled slightly. She also had raised bumps under the skin, but only on her hind legs, and she wasn’t scratching or licking them. Cortisone was not necessary.
The fact that her kibble was completely different from what she had been eating during the first reaction made us think it probably wasn’t food-related.
But now we have no idea what could have caused it, and we’re worried it might happen again.
I think she may be prone to allergies. She always scratches a little, but it gets much worse in spring and summer.
Back in 2019 (five years before the first severe reaction involving swelling, etc.), she had severe dermatitis with scabs and bleeding. At the time, we thought she might be allergic to flea bites because we found a few fleas on her, but we’re not certain.
After her most recent allergic reaction involving swelling (April 2026), we had blood allergy testing done. The results showed a “questionable” reaction to grass pollen, while all other environmental allergens tested negative.
In short, we don’t know what to do or what might be causing these severe reactions, so we also don’t know how to prevent them.
We live in the countryside and try to make sure she avoids tall grass.
We also keep her indoors when the grass has just been mowed, but apparently, that still wasn’t enough to prevent this new allergic reaction at the end of April 2026.
In both cases, we were not close to her when the reaction started.
During the first episode (April 2024), we were away from home and noticed something was wrong about half an hour after it had started. By then, she was already somewhat swollen and had hives under the skin.
During the second episode (April 2026), she simply got up from her bed in the morning, walked to the front door, and shortly afterwards came back to my bed.
She took two deep breaths and made a retching motion, and after a while, she started swelling up. I was in bed and didn’t see what happened while she was near the door.
Now we’re constantly on edge and don’t know whether we can leave her alone, because we have no idea what might be triggering these reactions—other than simple dermatitis.
What do you think? What could be triggering reactions like this?
I also read online about something called an allergy threshold or tolerance threshold.
As I understand it, a dog can “accumulate” exposure to allergens without showing major symptoms until it reaches a critical threshold and suddenly has a stronger reaction—but is that actually true?
And after a reaction like this, does the threshold reset? I haven’t been able to find much information about it, and my vet hasn’t been able to give me an answer either.
He keeps blaming the food, but during her first severe allergic reaction, she was eating kibble containing chicken, pork, wheat, and corn.
Now she eats grain-free lamb kibble (Acana Grass-Fed Lamb), so how could it still be the food? We don’t give her anything else besides kibble and, occasionally, carrots or apples.
Anyway, I apologise for writing so much—and maybe not very clearly—but we don’t know who else to turn to. Even our dog is living with anxiety and stress now because we’re afraid to let her do anything or even allow her to live normally anymore.
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