While it may get rid of bacteria, fungus and yeast it will not dry the area, it will still be moist. If you saturate the area for a few minutes with your CS you will also want to dry the area afterwards. Constanly damp skin is usually not healthy skin. If there is an off odor to the damp area there are things growing there you don't want. Why is it constantly moist there? Is his nose leather touching the fur where the fold is?
Good news is your CS will not hurt his eyes. You might want to join a breed specific group, search Yahoogroups to find one, and see if they have solutions for keeping a Japanese Chin's skin folds dry. I'm sure they would have suggestions that I can't think of. Silvia -----Original Message----- From: Gale Rivers [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, April 24, 2008 11:52 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: CS>dog related So do you think it will do the job and get rid of the bacteria and dry up moisture there???? Gale ----- Original Message ----- From: Todd Paddock To: [email protected] Sent: Thursday, April 24, 2008 9:44 AM Subject: RE: CS>dog related Have used as eyedrops for myself and my dogs, no problem. todd -------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: [email protected] To: [email protected] Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 08:55:20 -0700 Subject: CS>dog related I have a Japanese Chin (they have no length of nose). He always has a moist spot right in that crevasse. I think bacteria live there. Can I put the CS on that area and not hurt the eyes if some gets in them???? I am not really familiar with working with CS but have it and know it to be really good!!!! Gale from Poulsbo, Wa. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Spell a grand slam in this game where word skill meets World Series. Get in the game.

