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Cat Eosinophilic Granuloma Complex Symptom Tracker

Eosinophilic granuloma complex can show up as lip ulcers, raised plaques, or linear lesions that wax and wane. PetHealthLog helps you log lesion sites, suspected allergens, and treatments so patterns become easier to see.

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Why eosinophilic lesions are tricky to monitor

Lesions can appear on the lips, abdomen, or thighs and may move or recur, so a single snapshot rarely tells the whole story.

Flares are often linked to underlying allergies, but connecting food, fleas, or environment to a flare takes consistent records.

Treatments may involve steroids, diet trials, or flea control at the same time, making it hard to tell what is helping.

What the tracker actually does

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Affiliate links: as an Amazon Associate, PetHealthLog may earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. Informational only, not veterinary advice.

Get started in under a minute

  1. Set up your cat's profile and note the eosinophilic granuloma diagnosis and current treatments.
  2. Each time a lesion appears, tag the site, add a photo, and record any recent diet or flea changes.
  3. Review the trend summary with your vet to refine allergy testing or treatment decisions.
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Frequently asked questions

Can the app tell me what is causing my cat's lesions?
No. Identifying the underlying allergy requires veterinary workup such as diet trials or flea control. The app only organizes what you record.
How often should I photograph lesions?
Photographing at each flare and at follow-ups helps show change, but your vet interprets whether treatment is working.
Can I log a diet trial alongside lesions?
Yes. You can note each food change in the allergen journal so it lines up with lesion entries.
Does it cost anything?
No. Core lesion and medication tracking is free, with no account required to begin.
Should I stop steroids if lesions improve?
Do not change or stop any medication on your own. Always consult your veterinarian before adjusting treatment.

Start logging your cat's eosinophilic granuloma today

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Informational only - not veterinary advice. PetHealthLog helps you keep records and stay organised, but it does not diagnose, prescribe, or decide your pet's treatment. Diagnosis and any plan should be decided with a licensed veterinarian.

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