There is a difference between a dog who has dandruff and a dog who is scratching and has dandruff. The first one is almost always a diet or bath routine problem — fixable at home, responsive to fish oil and a better shampoo, sorted within a few weeks. The second one is a different conversation entirely.
When your dog is flaking and itching at the same time, those two things are almost never separate. The scratching and the dandruff are connected — both driven by the same underlying cause. And that cause is almost never a simple dry skin issue. Dry skin does not itch the way allergies itch. Dry skin does not send a dog after their own paws at three in the morning. Dry skin does not cause the kind of persistent, relentless scratching that leaves marks on the skin and fur on the floor in every room of the house.
If your dog is genuinely uncomfortable — scratching regularly, licking their paws, rubbing their face, or waking up to scratch — this guide is for you. It covers every cause of the scratching-and-dandruff combination, what each one looks like, and what the right response is for each. Some of these you can manage at home. Some of them need a vet, and we will be straight with you about which is which.
Quick Answer
Dandruff without significant itching is usually dietary or routine-driven — low omega-3s in the food, a stripping shampoo, bathing too often. Dandruff with persistent scratching is a different category. The most common causes of the scratching-and-dandruff combination are allergies (environmental or food), flea allergy dermatitis, skin infections from bacteria or yeast, parasites like mange mites or Cheyletiella walking dandruff, and seborrhoeic dermatitis. Most of these need a vet to correctly identify and treat — grooming fixes and fish oil do not resolve an allergic, infectious, or parasitic cause. The good news is that all of them are treatable once properly diagnosed, and the sooner they are diagnosed, the faster and more completely the skin recovers.
Table of Contents
- Dry Skin Dandruff vs Itch-Driven Dandruff — The Key Difference
- What to Check on Your Dog Right Now
- Environmental Allergies
- Food Allergies
- Flea Allergy Dermatitis — The Most Underestimated Cause
- Yeast Overgrowth
- Bacterial Skin Infection (Pyoderma)
- Cheyletiella Mites (Walking Dandruff)
- Mange
- Seborrhoeic Dermatitis
- Every Cause at a Glance
- What You Can Do at Home While You Wait for the Vet
- When to Call the Vet — and What to Tell Them
- FAQs
- Conclusion
- Related Posts
Dry Skin Dandruff vs Itch-Driven Dandruff — The Key Difference
This distinction matters more than anything else in this guide, because it determines the entire direction of treatment. Get it right and you fix the problem. Miss it and you spend months applying the wrong solutions to the wrong cause.
🔍 Dry Skin Dandruff vs Itch-Driven Dandruff
| Dry skin dandruff | Itch-driven dandruff |
|---|---|
| Even flaking across the whole body | Flaking concentrated in areas the dog can scratch or lick |
| Skin underneath looks dry but otherwise normal | Skin looks red, irritated, or has signs of self-trauma |
| Dog is not significantly itchy — occasional scratch, nothing persistent | Dog is persistently scratching, licking paws, rubbing face, waking to scratch |
| Coat looks dull and dry all over | Coat may look normal elsewhere but damaged in the scratched areas |
| No other symptoms present | May have recurring ear infections, eye discharge, or paw irritation alongside |
| Improves with fish oil and correct bath routine in 4–8 weeks | Does not improve with fish oil or shampoo changes — cause is not nutritional |
| Not seasonal or location-specific | May be seasonal (environmental allergy) or year-round (food allergy, parasite) |
If your dog is in the right-hand column — particularly if the itching is persistent and the flaking is in areas they are working at — read on. The causes below are the ones driving that combination, and each one has a specific response that actually addresses it.
What to Check on Your Dog Right Now
Before calling the vet, do a proper hands-on check. The information you gather makes the appointment faster, helps your vet triage how urgently you need to be seen, and means you go in having already ruled out the most obvious things. Good lighting, a flea comb if you have one, and five minutes.
📋 What to Check and What You Are Looking For
- Where is the scratching concentrated? Base of the tail, lower back, belly and inner thighs (fleas). Face, paws, armpits, groin (environmental allergies). Ears and paws (food allergies). All over, frantic (sarcoptic mange). Write it down.
- What does the skin look like in the scratched areas? Red and raw from self-trauma? Crusty or scabbed? Greasy? Dark and thickened from long-term inflammation? Or just dry-looking with flakes?
- Is there a smell? A musty, yeasty, corn-chip smell points strongly toward yeast overgrowth, usually in the warm moist areas — between the toes, ear canals, skin folds, armpits, groin.
- Check for fleas and flea dirt. Part the fur at the base of the tail and over the belly. Flea dirt looks like small dark specks — take a few on damp white paper or cotton wool. If they turn red-brown when wet, that is digested blood. That is flea dirt. That is your answer.
- Are the ears involved? Head shaking, pawing at the ears, dark or smelly discharge inside the ear canal — ear infections frequently accompany both allergies and yeast overgrowth on the skin.
- Are other pets in the household scratching too? If yes, a contagious cause — sarcoptic mange, Cheyletiella mites, ringworm — moves up the list significantly.
- Is anyone in the household itchy? Sarcoptic mange transfers temporarily to humans. Cheyletiella does too. Ringworm transfers. If the answer is yes, tell your vet that when you call.
- When did it start, and has anything changed around that time? New food, new flea treatment brand, new bed, new washing powder for their bedding, new garden, new pet in the house. Even things that seem unrelated.
📌 Write all of this down before the appointment: Vets see dozens of itchy dogs a week. The owners who come in with clear notes on where the scratching is, what the skin looks like, when it started, what has changed, and whether other pets or people are affected get to a diagnosis significantly faster than those who are trying to remember the details in the room. Five minutes of notes at home saves time and money at the vet.
Environmental Allergies
Environmental allergies — also called atopic dermatitis or atopy — are the most common cause of persistent scratching and dandruff in dogs, and one of the most frequently mismanaged because the symptoms look so similar to simple dry skin until you notice the itching pattern.
Dogs with environmental allergies react to airborne or contact allergens: grass pollen, tree pollen, dust mites, mould spores, and sometimes specific fabrics or surfaces. The immune system treats these as threats and responds with skin inflammation — itching, redness, barrier disruption — which then leads to flaking as a secondary consequence of both the inflammation and the scratching.
The pattern that distinguishes environmental allergies from most other causes is the seasonality and location. If the scratching is significantly worse at certain times of year — spring and summer for grass and pollen, year-round for dust mites — and concentrated on the belly, paws, inner thighs, armpits, and face (the areas in most contact with environmental allergens), atopy is a strong candidate. Many dogs with atopy also have recurring ear infections as a manifestation of the same allergic inflammation.
Environmental allergies cannot be cured, but they can be managed very well. Treatment options range from antihistamines for mild cases to prescription medications like Apoquel or Cytopoint for moderate to severe cases, and allergen-specific immunotherapy for dogs whose allergens have been identified through testing. Regular baths during high-pollen periods — washing allergens off the skin and coat before they have time to trigger a reaction — is one of the most effective management strategies that can be done at home.
⚠️ Environmental allergies tend to get worse with age, not better: A dog who has a mild spring reaction at two years old often has a more significant year-round reaction by five or six. Managing it early and consistently — rather than waiting for it to become severe before treating — keeps your dog more comfortable and prevents the secondary skin damage and infections that accumulate from years of chronic itching. If you recognise this pattern in your dog, bring it up at your next vet appointment rather than waiting for a crisis.
Food Allergies
Food allergies account for roughly 10–15% of allergic skin disease in dogs — less common than environmental allergies, but significantly underdiagnosed because the connection between a food eaten every day and gradually worsening skin is so easy to miss.
The skin symptoms of food allergies look nearly identical to environmental allergies: itching, skin inflammation, dandruff, and often recurring ear infections. The key distinguishing feature is that food allergy symptoms are year-round and non-seasonal, because the allergen is in the bowl every single day. Environmental allergy symptoms typically have a seasonal pattern, even if only mild.
The most common food allergens in dogs are beef, chicken, dairy, wheat, soy, and egg — in roughly that order. These are also some of the most common dog food ingredients, which is why many dogs with food allergies have been eating the offending ingredient for months or years before the allergy develops. Food allergies in dogs are almost always to a protein source, not a grain — which is why switching to grain-free food does not reliably help if the same proteins are still in the formula.
Diagnosis requires a strict elimination diet trial — eight to twelve weeks of a hydrolysed protein food or a novel protein your dog has genuinely never eaten before, with nothing else fed at all. No treats, no flavoured supplements, no chews. This needs to be done under vet guidance to be reliable. Blood allergy testing for food is widely offered and widely used, but the evidence for its diagnostic accuracy is poor — the elimination diet is the only method that actually identifies food allergens in dogs.
Flea Allergy Dermatitis — The Most Underestimated Cause
We are going to be blunt about this one, because it is the cause that gets dismissed most often and causes the most unnecessary suffering as a result: flea allergy dermatitis is one of the most common causes of persistent scratching and dandruff in dogs, and a significant number of dogs with this condition are not on adequate flea prevention, or are on prevention that is not working as well as their owner thinks.
In a flea-allergic dog — and many dogs are sensitised to flea saliva to some degree — a single flea bite triggers a disproportionate immune response. The dog does not need to be infested. One or two bites are enough to produce intense itching that lasts days to weeks. The scratching, licking, and biting that follows causes skin barrier damage and the flaking that comes with it.
The location is the giveaway: intense scratching and hair loss concentrated at the base of the tail, along the lower back, inner thighs, and belly. This is where fleas congregate. If that is where the action is on your dog, fleas are your first suspect regardless of whether you can see them — adult fleas spend most of their time in the environment, not on the dog, and flea dirt is often easier to find than the fleas themselves.
How to check for flea dirt right now
Part the fur at the base of the tail and look for small dark specks at the skin surface — flea dirt looks like ground black pepper. Take a few specks and place them on damp white tissue or cotton wool. If they turn a red-brown colour as they dissolve, that is digested blood. That is flea dirt. That confirms flea activity even if you have not seen a single adult flea.
What to do about it
Year-round veterinary-prescribed flea prevention, dosed correctly for your dog's current weight. Over-the-counter flea products have significantly lower efficacy than prescription options and many flea populations have developed resistance to the active ingredients in older formulations. If you are using an over-the-counter product and still finding flea dirt, the product is not working and needs to be replaced with something your vet prescribes. Treat all pets in the household simultaneously. Wash bedding on a hot wash and vacuum thoroughly — flea eggs and larvae in the environment are the reservoir that keeps reinfesting your dog.
🛒 Useful Tool — Flea Detection
Hartz Groomer's Best Flea Comb for Dogs
A fine-toothed flea comb run through the coat — particularly around the base of the tail, belly, and groin — is the fastest way to check for flea activity before a vet appointment. It catches adult fleas and flea dirt in the teeth, and combined with the damp tissue test above gives you a clear answer about whether fleas are part of the picture. Inexpensive and worth having in the house — knowing before you go in whether flea activity is present saves diagnostic time at the appointment. Remember: for treatment, talk to your vet about prescription options rather than relying on over-the-counter products.
Check Price on Amazon →Yeast Overgrowth
Malassezia — the yeast that lives naturally on dog skin in small amounts — can overgrow when the skin barrier is compromised, when the immune system is suppressed, or when a dog's skin has the warm, moist conditions that yeast thrive in. When it does, it produces a characteristic and very recognisable presentation.
The smell is the most distinctive sign: a musty, yeasty, sometimes corn-chip-like odour coming from the skin. It is most concentrated in the warm moist areas where yeast accumulates — between the toes, inside the ear canals, in skin folds on the face or body, the armpits, and the groin. The skin in affected areas often looks greasy rather than dry, may be darker than the surrounding skin (hyperpigmentation from chronic inflammation), and the dog licks, chews, and rubs at these areas persistently.
Yeast overgrowth almost always has an underlying driver — most commonly allergies, because allergic inflammation disrupts the skin barrier and creates the conditions yeast thrive in. Treating the yeast infection without addressing the underlying allergy leads to the infection clearing and then recurring. Your vet will often treat the infection first to get the skin stable, then address the allergy driving it.
Treatment involves antifungal medication — topical, oral, or both depending on severity — and medicated antifungal shampoo used at a prescribed frequency. It is not something that resolves with regular dog shampoo, however good the formulation.
📌 The corn chip smell is a yeast signal: If your dog's paws, ears, or skin folds have that distinctive musty or corn-chip smell and your dog is licking or rubbing those areas — do not wait to see if it settles. Yeast infections are uncomfortable, they worsen without treatment, and the longer they go on the more secondary skin damage accumulates. It is one of the more distinctive diagnoses to bring to the vet because the smell alone is very informative.
Bacterial Skin Infection (Pyoderma)
Bacterial skin infections — called pyoderma — are another frequent companion to scratching and dandruff, particularly in dogs who have been itching for a while. The connection is straightforward: persistent scratching breaks the skin surface, and broken skin is an entry point for bacteria. Many dogs with underlying allergies develop a secondary bacterial infection on top of the allergic inflammation, which is why the skin gets worse rather than better even after the initial allergy is managed.
Pyoderma presents with small pustules (pimple-like spots), crusts, and scabs on the skin surface — most commonly on the belly, groin, and armpits where the skin is thinner and less protected by the coat. The surrounding skin is usually red and inflamed. The dog is itchy and uncomfortable. In deeper infections, the skin may feel warm to the touch and have a distinct smell.
Bacterial skin infections need prescription antibiotic treatment — oral antibiotics for more extensive infections, topical antibacterial wash or spray for more localised ones, often both. They do not clear with regular shampoo, and leaving them untreated allows the infection to deepen and spread. Most bacterial skin infections also have an underlying cause — allergy being the most common — and without addressing that cause, the infection recurs once treatment stops.
Cheyletiella Mites (Walking Dandruff)
Cheyletiella is worth its own section because it is probably the most misidentified cause of scratching and dandruff in dogs — frequently mistaken for dry skin or simple dandruff until someone looks closely enough to notice that the flakes appear to move.
Cheyletiella mites are large enough to be seen with the naked eye in some cases, and their movement through the scale they produce gives the condition its name: walking dandruff. The presentation is heavy white scale concentrated along the back and neck, often more dramatic than regular dry skin dandruff. The dog is itchy — sometimes intensely, sometimes moderately. The scale is dense enough to look sprinkled on rather than naturally occurring.
It is highly contagious — between dogs, to cats, and temporarily to humans, who may develop itchy red bumps on their arms and torso from contact with an affected dog. If other pets in your household are developing similar symptoms, or if you are itching in a pattern consistent with animal contact, Cheyletiella is high on the list.
Diagnosis is by skin scraping or tape impression at the vet — the mites are identified under a microscope. Treatment requires prescription antiparasitic medication for all pets in the household simultaneously, plus thorough environmental treatment. This is not something that resolves without vet-prescribed treatment.
Mange
Both types of mange that affect dogs — sarcoptic and demodectic — produce scratching and skin changes, but they look and behave very differently and have very different implications for contagion.
Sarcoptic mange is caused by Sarcoptes mites that burrow into the skin. The itching is intense — genuinely relentless, worse at night, and rapidly spreading. Hair loss and crusty thickened skin start at the ear margins, elbows, hocks, and belly. The dog cannot rest and the condition progresses quickly. It is highly contagious to other dogs and temporarily transferable to humans. If your dog is scratching with an urgency and intensity that feels different from ordinary itchiness, and it came on relatively suddenly, sarcoptic mange needs to be on the list. This is a vet visit today rather than a wait-and-see situation.
Demodectic mange is caused by Demodex mites that normally live in small numbers in hair follicles without causing problems. When the immune system is young or compromised, the mites multiply and produce patchy hair loss with scaling — typically starting around the face and front legs in young dogs. The itching is usually less intense than sarcoptic mange. Demodectic mange is not contagious. Mild cases in puppies sometimes resolve on their own; moderate to severe or spreading cases need prescription treatment.
⚠️ If you suspect sarcoptic mange — treat it as urgent: Sarcoptic mange spreads fast between dogs and causes genuine suffering. If your dog is scratching with real intensity and you have noticed your own skin itching where the dog has been in contact with you — ring the vet today. All dogs in the household will need treatment. The sooner you start, the less the infestation spreads and the faster everyone recovers.
Seborrhoeic Dermatitis
Seborrhoeic dermatitis is a skin condition involving abnormal sebum production — the skin produces too much or too little of its natural oils, leading to either greasy, waxy scale (oily seborrhoea) or dry, powdery scale (dry seborrhoea), or a combination of both. It can be primary — a genetic condition seen in certain breeds — or secondary, developing as a consequence of another underlying condition like allergies, hormonal disorders, or nutritional deficiencies.
Breeds with a higher predisposition to primary seborrhoeic dermatitis include Cocker Spaniels, Basset Hounds, West Highland White Terriers, Dachshunds, and Labrador Retrievers. In these breeds, the condition often develops in the first one to two years of life and requires ongoing management rather than a one-time fix.
The itching in seborrhoeic dermatitis varies — the oily form tends to be itchier and more odorous (greasy scale with a distinctive rancid smell), while the dry form produces visible white or grey powdery scale with mild to moderate itching. Both forms can affect the whole body or be concentrated in specific areas — ears, face, elbows, and the back are most commonly involved.
Secondary seborrhoeic dermatitis — which is more common — is managed by identifying and treating the underlying cause. Primary seborrhoeic dermatitis is managed long-term with medicated shampoos (keratolytic, antiseborrhoeic, and antimicrobial formulations), regular bathing schedules, and omega-3 supplementation to support sebum quality. Your vet will advise on the appropriate products and frequency for your specific dog.
Every Cause at a Glance
What You Can Do at Home While You Wait for the Vet
Most causes of scratching-and-dandruff need a vet visit to diagnose and treat properly. But there are things you can do at home in the meantime that provide some relief, reduce self-trauma, and support the skin while you wait for the appointment — without interfering with the diagnostic process.
A gentle oatmeal bath. Fine-ground plain oats dissolved in lukewarm bathwater, applied to the coat and skin for five to ten minutes before rinsing, provides genuine relief from surface itching and soothes inflamed skin without using any active ingredients that might confuse your vet's assessment. It is safe for most causes of itchy skin and non-toxic if licked. Use it as often as needed — every few days if the itching is significant.
Keep the nails short. A dog who is scratching at their own skin does significantly more damage with long nails than short ones. Trimming nails before an appointment — or having them done at a groomer — reduces the skin damage from self-trauma while you wait.
Check and treat for fleas. Even if fleas seem unlikely, check thoroughly using the flea comb and damp tissue test described earlier. If you find flea dirt, start the household flea treatment process immediately — wash all bedding, vacuum thoroughly, and apply whatever flea prevention you have access to as an interim measure while arranging the vet appointment for prescription options.
Do not apply new products to irritated skin. It is tempting to try a medicated shampoo, a new cream, or an essential oil remedy while waiting. Please resist. Applying products to skin that is already inflamed can worsen the irritation, cause a contact reaction on top of the existing problem, and make your vet's assessment harder. A plain oatmeal rinse or cool water compress on a hot spot is the limit of what to apply until the cause is known.
🛒 Recommended — Safe While You Wait for the Vet
Burt's Bees Hypoallergenic Shampoo with Colloidal Oatmeal & Honey
A fragrance-free, sulphate-free, pH-balanced shampoo that soothes itchy, inflamed skin without any active ingredients that would interfere with your vet's diagnosis. The colloidal oatmeal provides real itch relief on contact and the honey adds a gentle humectant effect. This is the shampoo we reach for when a dog needs a bath but the cause of the skin problem is still being worked out — gentle enough to use on sensitive or already-irritated skin, and genuinely calming rather than just cleaning. Safe for regular use throughout the diagnostic and treatment process.
Check Price on Amazon →When to Call the Vet — and What to Tell Them
If your dog is persistently scratching — not just the occasional scratch but regular, noticeable, uncomfortable scratching that is disrupting their rest or causing skin damage — a vet appointment is the right call. The scratching-and-dandruff combination has a specific cause in virtually every case, and that cause has a specific treatment. Finding it ends the cycle. Treating the surface without finding it does not.
Some situations are more urgent than others. Call today rather than waiting for a routine appointment if:
- The scratching is causing open sores, bleeding, or significant hair loss
- The skin looks infected — pustules, crusts, warmth, or a smell
- The itching came on suddenly and is intense rather than gradual and mild
- Other pets in the household are developing the same symptoms
- You or anyone else in the household has developed unexplained itching
- The flakes appear to move when you look closely at them
- Your dog is not sleeping because of the scratching
When you call, tell them: where the scratching is concentrated, what the skin looks like in those areas, whether there is any smell, whether other pets or people in the household are affected, when it started and what if anything changed around that time, and what flea prevention you are using and when it was last applied. That information gets you to a diagnosis faster than starting from scratch in the room.
🐾Related Reading
How to Fix Flaky Skin on Dogs: Causes, Treatments & What Actually Works
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is my dog scratching and has dandruff?
When a dog is both scratching and producing dandruff, the two are almost always part of the same underlying problem rather than two separate issues. The most common causes of this combination are allergies (environmental or food), flea allergy dermatitis, skin infections from bacteria or yeast, parasites like Cheyletiella mites or mange, and seborrhoeic dermatitis. Simple dry skin from dietary deficiency tends to produce flaking without significant itching. Persistent scratching alongside dandruff almost always needs a vet assessment — grooming and dietary fixes will not resolve an allergic, infectious, or parasitic cause.
Can fleas cause dandruff and scratching in dogs?
Yes — flea allergy dermatitis is one of the most common causes of both intense scratching and skin flaking in dogs. In a flea-allergic dog, a single bite triggers a disproportionate immune response causing intense itching that lasts days to weeks. The self-trauma from scratching and biting damages the skin barrier and produces flaking and hair loss, concentrated at the base of the tail, lower back, inner thighs, and belly. You may not see live fleas — check for flea dirt using the damp tissue test described in this guide. Year-round veterinary-prescribed flea prevention, correctly dosed, is the primary management strategy.
What is the difference between dandruff from dry skin and dandruff from allergies?
Dry skin dandruff is even across the body, the skin underneath looks dry but not inflamed, and the dog is not significantly itchy — the flaking is there but not causing scratching or discomfort. It improves with fish oil and a corrected bath routine within four to eight weeks. Allergy dandruff is driven by skin inflammation — the dog is itchy first and flaky second, the flaking is concentrated in areas the dog can scratch, and it does not improve with fish oil or shampoo changes because the cause is an immune response rather than a nutritional deficiency.
Should I take my dog to the vet for scratching and dandruff?
If the scratching is persistent — your dog is regularly working at their skin, paws, ears, or face rather than having an occasional scratch — yes, a vet visit is the right call. The combination of significant scratching and dandruff almost always has a specific treatable cause, and identifying it correctly means treatment actually works rather than providing temporary relief that wears off. It is urgent if the scratching is causing visible skin damage, open sores, or significant hair loss, if the skin looks infected or smells, if other pets or people are itching too, or if the itching came on suddenly and intensely.
Conclusion
A dog who is flaking and not particularly itchy is probably dealing with a nutritional or routine issue — fixable at home, responsive to the right changes, sorted within a couple of months. That is not the dog this guide is for.
This guide is for the dog who is scratching. The one who wakes themselves up at night. The one whose skin is getting worse rather than better despite the shampoos and the supplements and the good intentions. That dog has a specific cause driving both the itching and the flaking, and that cause has a specific treatment. Fish oil and oatmeal baths are wonderful things — but they are not the treatment for allergies, or flea allergy dermatitis, or a yeast infection, or sarcoptic mange.
The most useful thing this guide can do for you is help you recognise which category you are in — and if the answer is that your dog needs a vet, give you enough information to go into that appointment knowing what you are looking at and what questions to ask. A diagnosis ends the cycle. Everything before that is just managing the surface of something that has a root.
Your dog cannot tell you they are uncomfortable. But they are showing you, every time they scratch. You are listening. Now take them in.
Has your dog been through the scratching-and-dandruff cycle and come out the other side with a proper diagnosis? What was the cause, and how long did it take to get there? Share in the comments — the path other dog parents took to the answer is often the most useful thing for someone who is right at the beginning of it.
Related Posts
- How to Fix Flaky Skin on Dogs: Causes, Treatments & What Actually Works — The complete treatment guide for flaky skin — from dietary fixes and bath routine corrections to the full breakdown of every medical cause and what the vet will do about each one.
- Why Is My Dog Shedding in Patches? — When the hair loss is localised rather than all-over — what the patterns mean, what conditions cause patchy loss, and how to get to a diagnosis.
- Can Dog Food Cause Dandruff? What You're Feeding Could Be the Problem — If the dandruff is there without significant itching, diet is the most likely driver. Everything you need to know about the food-skin connection and how to fix it.
- How to Moisturise Dog Skin Naturally: 9 Methods That Actually Work — The natural toolkit for supporting skin health alongside whatever veterinary treatment is underway — fish oil, oatmeal, coconut oil, leave-in spray, and more.







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