If your French Bulldog is scratching more this week than she was in February, I need you to read every word of this article.
What I'm about to tell you is going to change how you understand your dog, this breed, and spring forever.
I say that as someone who spent 12 years telling Frenchie owners the same thing every May — and I was wrong every single time.
My name is Dr. Sarah Mitchell. I'm a veterinary nutritionist. I've worked exclusively with French Bulldogs for over a decade. I've sat in hundreds of exam rooms during allergy season and said the same sentence: "It's seasonal. We'll increase the dose. She'll be better by fall."
I said it with confidence. I said it with authority.
And I said it to myself about my own French Bulldog, Nora, for eight consecutive springs.
Nora is dead now. She died at eight.
Every spring I spent managing her symptoms with medication increases was a spring I was making her worse.
Remember the puppy.
Not the dog on the couch next to you right now. The puppy.
The coat that was so soft strangers stopped you on the street. The zoomies that went on so long you worried something was wrong. The belly that smelled like a belly, not like something fermenting.
The ears that were clean. The eyes that were clear. The energy that was limitless.
Now look at the dog next to you.
The coat dulled. The energy faded. Maybe the ears cycle through infections every few months. Maybe the belly has a smell you've learned to ignore.
Someone told you she was maturing. Maybe your vet said it. Maybe you told yourself.
The clock is running.
French Bulldogs live 9 to 10 years on average. Many don't make 8.
If she's 3, you might have 5 springs left. If she's 5, you might have 3.
Every spring that passes without addressing the source is a spring you can't get back. And every spring is worse than the last.
That's not a scare tactic. That's what I watched happen to my own dog, in my own home, under my own care.
Your dog doesn't have seasonal allergies.
Here's what nobody told you. What nobody told me for a decade of veterinary practice.
What your French Bulldog has is a chronically compromised gut that can handle winter allergens but completely breaks down when spring arrives — because the immune system is already running at maximum capacity before the first pollen grain hits.
72% of your dog's immune system lives in the gut. French Bulldogs have the most sensitive microbiome of any breed. When that microbiome is inflamed year-round — and in most Frenchies, it is — the immune system operates at reduced capacity every single day.
In winter, reduced capacity is enough. Allergen load is low. Your dog seems fine.
Then spring arrives. Pollen triples. Environmental allergens spike. And your dog's immune system — already running at 70% — can't handle the surge. It overflows.
The scratching starts. The ears flare. You go to the vet. The vet says "allergy season" and increases the dose.
"The season is the match. The gut is the fuel. And nobody — including me, for 12 years — is putting out the fuel. We're all just trying to blow out the match every May."
The medications — Apoquel, Cytopoint, steroid courses — suppress the immune system during the exact season it needs to be strongest. Each spring of suppression leaves less immune reserve for the following year.
The medication manages the current spring while building the next one.
Here's what the next few years look like.
If this is your first or second spring with a Frenchie, this is your dog's future if nothing changes. I've seen this hundreds of times. I lived it myself.
Nora went through eight springs.
Eight. And I was her vet.
I was the one writing the prescriptions. The one increasing the dose every May. The one saying "it's seasonal" while watching the pattern get worse year after year.
Nora had this stuffed duck. Yellow. Ridiculous thing. She carried it everywhere when she was young — through the house, into the yard, onto her bed. Every morning she'd bring it to me like an offering.
By spring three, the duck stopped appearing in the mornings.
By spring five, it stayed on the floor where she'd dropped it.
By spring seven, I found it under the couch, covered in dust.
I told myself she was getting older. Dogs slow down.
Nora died at 8. Chronic systemic inflammation. Organ strain. A gut that had been screaming for help through every ear infection, every skin flare, every spring that started earlier and ended later.
And I answered every time with a medication increase.
After Nora, I stopped treating "allergy season." I started treating the gut.
I rebuilt my approach from the ground up. Not managing symptoms. Not suppressing immune responses. Supporting the microbiome that controls 72% of the immune system in the first place.
I looked for a supplement formulated specifically for French Bulldogs — not "for all breeds" with a Golden Retriever on the label and a probiotic dose that wouldn't register in a Frenchie's gut.
I needed something built for the brachycephalic digestive system specifically.
What I found was PawGuard.
PawGuard — Formulated Exclusively for French Bulldogs
15 breed-specific ingredients targeting gut health, immune function, skin, coat, and joint support:
I have no affiliation with PawGuard. I receive no commission. I recommend it because it's the only supplement I've found formulated for this breed specifically — not adapted from a general formula.
Olive and Bean don't know what allergy season is.
I have two French Bulldogs now. Olive is 4. Bean is 7.
Olive has been on gut support since puppyhood. Three springs. Zero spikes. Zero medication increases. She goes through May the same way she goes through January.
Bean is older than Nora was when the decline started. Three springs on gut support. Her coat is better now than it was at 3. Her ears are cleaner than they've ever been.
Same breed. Same pollen. Same backyard. Different gut. Different spring.
It's not just my dogs.
Diana brought her Frenchie Biscuit to me after four consecutive springs of increasing medication. Biscuit was 5. Maximum Apoquel. Cytopoint every 6 weeks. Medicated shampoo twice a week. Still scratching through the night in May.
I asked Diana to try something different. Start gut support in late April — right at the beginning of the worst season. The hardest possible test conditions.
If it worked during peak pollen, it worked period.
Week two: scratching decreased noticeably. In May. During the worst pollen count of the year.
Month two: ears were clean for the first time during a spring season.
Month three: Diana reduced Apoquel for the first time in three years — with her vet's supervision.
"Four springs of increasing medication. This was our first spring supporting the gut. She went through May like it was January. I sat in my vet's office and almost cried."
The proof is in the timing. Improvement during the worst conditions eliminates every excuse. Can't say the season was ending. It was at its peak. Can't say she would have gotten better anyway. She'd been getting worse for four years straight.
The only variable that changed was the gut.
This doesn't have to be the worst spring. It can be the last bad one.
I'm writing this in May because May is when you need to hear it most.
If you're watching your French Bulldog scratch right now — this week, today — you're watching the same pattern I watched with Nora for eight years.
I am telling you, as a veterinarian who lost her own dog to this exact pattern, that you do not have to accept it as seasonal. It is not seasonal. It is structural. And the structure can be supported.
Start now. In May. During the worst of it.
The 90-day money-back guarantee means you're testing PawGuard under the hardest possible conditions — peak allergy season. If it works now, it works period. If it doesn't, you pay nothing.
Try PawGuard During Peak Allergy Season
90-day money-back guarantee. The hardest test conditions you could ask for.
Try PawGuard Risk-Free →The pollen isn't the problem. The gut is.
My first Frenchie got medication increases every May. She's gone.
My current Frenchies get PawGuard every day. They don't know what allergy season is.
— Dr. Sarah Mitchell, DVM
Veterinary Nutritionist · 12 Years with French Bulldogs
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