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    Dog skin supplements for Pekingese & Lhasa Apso

    This is a specific conversation about Dog skin and coat supplements — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Two dogs on the same diet both showing dry skin is actually a useful clue — when it affects multiple dogs eating identically, the diet is usually the common factor rather than an individual health issue. That said, skin and coat problems generally fall into two buckets: dietary deficiency or an underlying skin condition. Supplements make a real difference only when the root cause is nutritional. To point you in the right direction, can you tell me a bit more — what exactly are you seeing on each dog (flaking, dull coat, itching, or all of the above), and what dry food are they currently on?
    They're both getting flaky skin and their coats look a bit dull. No real itching. I've had them on the same supermarket own-brand dry food for about two years. Pekingese is 5, Lhasa is 9.
    inparticular.ai
    That picture makes sense. Supermarket own-brand kibbles often use lower-quality fats and can be light on omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids — the two nutrients that do the most work for skin barrier function and coat gloss. No itching and no hot spots means you're probably not dealing with an allergy or infection, which is reassuring. The fact that both dogs are showing the same thing on the same food strongly suggests a dietary gap rather than anything breed-specific. Both Pekingeses and Lhasa Apsos have dense double coats that are quite demanding on the body's fat reserves, so they can show deficiencies more visibly than short-coated breeds. One quick question before I suggest something: are either of them on any medication, or does the Lhasa Apso have any known health conditions given her age?
    No medications. The Lhasa had a vet check last year and was given the all clear. Both seem healthy otherwise.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — that makes this straightforward. I'd recommend YuMEGA Plus Oil for Dogs. It's a cold-pressed salmon and starflower oil blend that delivers a specific ratio of EPA, DHA, and GLA — the fatty acids that directly support skin cell integrity and coat quality. It comes in a pump bottle, so dosing is easy and you can just adjust the number of pumps for each dog's weight. It's well-regarded by vets in the UK and has a good track record with double-coated breeds exactly like yours. Because you're treating two dogs, the bottle format also works out more economical than capsules or chews. You should start seeing coat improvement within six to eight weeks, though skin flaking often settles a bit sooner. I'd also suggest looking at upgrading their food over time — a kibble with named fish or chicken fat as the first fat source will sustain those gains long-term — but the oil will address the deficiency directly while you work on that.
    View Yumega Plus Skin & Coat Supplement on Amazon
    That sounds good. How much do I give each of them, and is it safe to use long term?
    inparticular.ai
    YuMEGA Plus is safe for long-term daily use — it's essentially a food supplement, not a medication. The dosing is based on body weight and printed on the bottle, but as a rough guide: a Pekingese (typically 3–6 kg) would get around 1–2 pumps per day, and a Lhasa Apso (typically 6–8 kg) around 2–3 pumps. Just drizzle it over their kibble — most dogs eat it without any fuss. The one thing to watch is that if you ever significantly increase the dose above the recommended amount, it can loosen stools temporarily, so stick to the guide on the label. Other than that, no concerns at all for ongoing use in healthy dogs.
    Great, that's really helpful. I'll order it today.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — I think you'll notice a difference within a few weeks. If the flaking hasn't improved at all after eight weeks on the correct dose, it's worth revisiting with your vet just to rule out anything like hypothyroidism, which can show up as skin and coat changes in older dogs. But given what you've described, that's unlikely — the dietary explanation fits very neatly here. Hope both of them are looking glossy again soon.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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