Discoid Lupus Erythematosus (DLE)

What It Is

Discoid lupus erythematosus is a chronic autoimmune cutaneous lupus disorder that most often affects the nasal planum and facial skin, causing depigmentation, scaling, crusting, erosions, ulceration, and loss of normal cobblestone texture.

Also Called: discoid lupus; cutaneous lupus; nasal lupus

Abbreviation: DLE

Breeds Affected: Lakeland Terrier


The Idiot-Proof Explanation

DLE is an autoimmune skin disease where the immune system picks a fight with the skin, usually on the nose. The nose can lose pigment, get crusty, smooth, cracked, raw, or ulcerated, especially with sun exposure.


What Causes It

DLE is immune-mediated. UV light often worsens lesions, and genetics/breed tendency may influence risk.

It is usually limited to the skin and is not the same thing as systemic lupus taking over the whole body.

  • The immune system attacks skin structures, especially on the nose and face.
  • Sun exposure can worsen lesions.
  • Biopsy is often needed because DLE can mimic other skin diseases.
  • Long-term control may be needed even when the dog looks better.

The nose is not supposed to peel, crust, and ulcerate forever. That is not a personality trait.


What This Means for Life With This Dog

Life with DLE often means sun management, topical medication, rechecks, and watching the nose like it is a tiny weather report.

Many dogs do well with treatment, but stopping meds too soon or letting the dog bake in the sun can bring lesions right back.

Because it can look like infection, allergy, cancer, trauma, or other immune disease, diagnosis matters before slathering random goo on the dog.


Can It Be Fixed?

DLE is usually managed, not permanently cured. Many dogs can be controlled with sun avoidance, topical medications, supplements, and immune-modulating treatment when needed.


Symptoms Owners May Notice

Loss of nose pigment: The black nose may turn gray, pink, or patchy as pigment fades.

Crusting or scaling: The nose can look dry, flaky, scabby, or rough instead of normal and textured.

Ulcers, cracks, or bleeding: More active disease can create raw, painful, bleeding areas.

Worse after sun exposure: Lesions may flare in sunny months or after heavy UV exposure, because apparently the sun wanted a villain arc too.


Treatment Options

Diagnosis and biopsy: Your vet may recommend biopsy, cytology, cultures, or other testing to separate DLE from infection, pemphigus, cancer, and other look-alike problems.

Sun protection and topical therapy: UV avoidance, dog-safe sun protection, topical steroids, tacrolimus, or other prescribed medications may be used.

Systemic treatment: More stubborn cases may need oral medications or supplements. Do not freestyle immune medication because the internet looked confident.


Recovery and Aftercare

Aftercare means regular monitoring, medication consistency, avoiding intense sun, and rechecks when lesions worsen. Nose improvement can be slow, so patience is required. Horrifying, I know.


What Happens If You Wait

Waiting gives inflammation time to damage skin.

Untreated DLE can lead to chronic ulceration, pain, bleeding, scarring, and secondary infection. It also delays ruling out scarier diseases that can look similar.


Cost Reality Check

DLE costs depend on whether biopsy is needed, how stubborn the lesions are, and whether long-term topical or systemic treatment is required.

Care Level What It May Include Estimated Cost
Initial workup Exam, skin workup, cytology/cultures, and initial medications. $200-$800
Ongoing management Rechecks, topical medication, sun protection, supplements, and flare management. $300-$1,500+ per year
Severe case Biopsy, dermatology referral, or systemic immune-modulating therapy for difficult cases. $1,000-$4,000+

Need for biopsy: Biopsy costs more, but guessing wrong on autoimmune skin disease is not the bargain people think it is.

Sun exposure: Dogs that love sunbathing like tiny reckless rotisserie chickens may flare harder.

Medication response: Easy responders are cheaper. Stubborn noses become a project.

Specialist care: Dermatology referral can be worth it when the face refuses to cooperate.


Budget Reality Check

Budget Item Estimated Cost
Exam and skin diagnostics $100-$500
Biopsy and pathology $500-$1,500+
Topical medication and sun care $100-$800+ per year
Oral medications or supplements $200-$1,500+ per year
Dermatology consult $200-$800+

Lifetime Cost Reality

Case Pattern Possible Lifetime Cost
Mild controlled case $500-$2,000+
Recurring flare case $2,000-$6,000+
Stubborn dermatology case $4,000-$10,000+

Tell Me What I Should Really Expect

DLE is usually manageable, but it is not “just a dry nose.”

If the nose is losing pigment, crusting, cracking, or ulcerating, get it checked. Chronic face inflammation deserves a diagnosis, not coconut oil and a prayer circle.