SYMPTOM
Frequent ear infections
Recurring ear inflammation with discharge, odour, or head shaking that returns after treatment or persists seasonally.
Allergic or Atopic
Recurrent ear infections are among the most common manifestations of underlying allergic disease in dogs. Environmental allergens, food sensitivities, or a combination of both can produce chronic inflammation in the ear canal that alters the local microenvironment, reducing natural defences and creating conditions favourable for secondary microbial overgrowth. The ears may be affected in isolation or as part of a broader pattern of skin involvement, and the recurrent nature of the infections often reflects the ongoing nature of the underlying allergic process rather than a failure of previous treatment.
Anatomical or Conformational
Ear canal anatomy can predispose certain breeds to recurrent infections. Pendulous ear flaps reduce ventilation, narrow ear canals limit drainage, and excessive hair growth within the canal can trap moisture and debris. Breeds with these conformational features may experience recurrent infections due to the persistent environmental conditions within the canal rather than a systemic disease process, though conformational factors often interact with other predisposing conditions.
Endocrine
Hormonal imbalances, particularly hypothyroidism and hyperadrenocorticism, can alter skin and ear canal biology in ways that increase susceptibility to infection. These endocrine conditions may change sebum production, reduce local immune function, and alter the microbiome of the ear canal. Ear infections occurring in the context of endocrine disease often prove difficult to resolve completely without addressing the underlying hormonal imbalance.
Microbial Resistance or Biofilm
Repeated courses of antimicrobial treatment can select for resistant organisms or promote the development of bacterial biofilms within the ear canal. These biofilms — structured communities of bacteria encased in a protective matrix — can be remarkably resistant to topical treatments and may serve as a reservoir for recurrent infection. What appears to be a new infection may actually represent re-emergence of the same persistent microbial population.
Foreign Body or Polyp
Chronic or recurrent ear infections in one ear in particular may be associated with a physical obstruction within the ear canal. Grass seeds, polyps, ceruminous gland tumours, or other masses can disrupt normal canal drainage, create a nidus for infection, and prevent complete resolution despite appropriate treatment. These structural causes may be difficult to visualise without thorough examination and may require specific investigation to identify.
Autoimmune or Immune-Mediated
Certain immune-mediated conditions can target the ear canal epithelium, producing chronic inflammation that predisposes to secondary infection. Pemphigus, lupus, and vasculitis may all affect the ears, though these are less common than allergic causes. The inflammation in these conditions may respond initially to antimicrobial treatment but tends to recur because the underlying immune-mediated process remains active.
Why timing matters
Early observation
A first or early ear infection may simply reflect a transient disruption of the ear canal's normal defences — after swimming, bathing, or environmental exposure. At this stage, the infection typically responds to appropriate treatment and resolves completely. The clinical significance lies less in the individual infection and more in whether it represents the beginning of a pattern. Noting the circumstances surrounding the first infection and whether complete resolution is achieved can help contextualise any future recurrences.
Later presentation
When ear infections recur repeatedly — returning within weeks of completing treatment, or cycling through periods of apparent resolution and relapse — the pattern itself becomes informative. Chronic recurrence often indicates an underlying predisposing factor that persists between episodes, whether allergic, endocrine, anatomical, or structural. Over time, repeated inflammation can produce permanent changes in the ear canal including stenosis, calcification, and epithelial hyperplasia, which further predispose to future infections and may eventually alter the range of management options available.
The trajectory of recurrent ear infections tends to reflect the trajectory of the underlying predisposing cause. Allergic ear disease often shows seasonal fluctuations if environmental allergens are involved, or may be year-round with food sensitivities. Endocrine-related ear disease may worsen as the hormonal imbalance progresses. Without identification and management of the underlying driver, the cycle of recurrence typically continues and may intensify, with infections becoming more resistant to treatment, more frequent, or more severe over time. Chronic changes to the canal architecture may develop progressively, potentially creating a self-perpetuating cycle of infection and inflammation.
Conditions commonly associated
Atopic Dermatitis in Dogs
Otitis Externa in Dogs
Otitis externa is one of the most common causes of recurrent ear infections in dogs. Chronic or repeated episodes of ear inflammation often share underlying predisposing factors such as allergies, anatomical conformation, or moisture retention.
Food Allergy in Dogs
Food allergy is a significant predisposing factor for recurrent ear infections. The allergic inflammation affects the ear canal epithelium, altering the local microenvironment and predisposing to secondary bacterial and yeast overgrowth. Bilateral, non-seasonal ear disease is a particularly suggestive pattern.
Otitis Externa in Cats
Recurrent episodes of feline otitis externa often indicate an underlying cause such as allergies or structural abnormalities that requires identification and management.
Malassezia Dermatitis
Malassezia commonly affects the ears alongside skin, causing recurrent otitis with characteristic brown, waxy discharge.
Ear Mites
Chronic ear mite infestation can predispose to secondary bacterial or yeast ear infections, leading to recurrent otitis if the underlying mite problem is not addressed.
When to explore further
Ear infections that recur within weeks of completing a course of treatment, or that never fully resolve despite apparently appropriate medication, may suggest either an unaddressed underlying predisposing factor or the presence of resistant organisms that are not being adequately targeted by the chosen treatment.
When ear infections occur alongside other skin changes — such as itchy paws, face rubbing, generalised scratching, recurrent skin infections, or anal gland problems — the combination may suggest a systemic allergic or immune-mediated process rather than a localised ear canal problem.
Ear infections that consistently affect one ear more than the other, or that are confined to a single ear, may suggest a structural or anatomical factor specific to that ear canal, such as a polyp, foreign body, or mass, rather than a bilateral predisposing condition.
A seasonal pattern to ear infection recurrence, with infections clustering in spring, summer, or autumn, may point toward environmental allergic triggers that become active during those periods, while year-round recurrence without seasonal variation might suggest food sensitivities or other non-seasonal factors.
When recurrent ear infections develop in a middle-aged or older animal alongside other systemic changes such as weight gain, lethargy, skin changes, or altered coat quality, the combination may reflect an underlying endocrine condition that is affecting the ear canal's resistance to infection.
Understanding recurrent ear infections benefits from building a detailed history of each episode — when it occurred, which ear was affected, what treatment was used, how quickly resolution occurred, and how long remission lasted before the next episode. Noting any seasonal patterns, dietary correlations, or environmental factors associated with recurrences can help characterise the underlying predisposing cause. Recognising that recurrent ear infections are typically a symptom of an underlying process rather than a standalone problem often shifts the focus of understanding from the individual infection to the broader pattern.
Last reviewed: 24 April 2026 · Dr Alastair Greenway MRCVS