Reuniting cats following a visit to the vet
Steven J. Bailey,
DVM, DABVP
2015
Traditionally, veterinarians have speculated that new odors
on the cat returning home from the veterinary practice were a stimulus for antagonistic
behavior between cats. I do not believe this is entirely true, and perhaps
leads to clients (and professionals) further antagonizing these stressed cats
by applying unnatural scents (perfumes and Baby Powder) with the intent to
cover, mask, or replace other scents.
Cats have the ability to detect many more odors and
pheromones than we people can even imagine. I have never appreciated that our
feeble attempts to address these 'odors' has had any positive impact on feline
behavior with respect to these homecomings.
My perception of some of the causes has been:
- When a cat leaves a clowder of cats (even if the clowder
is just a pair) it appears that they need to receive permission to rejoin. If
this reintroduction is rushed and stressful, then antagonistic behavior is more
likely to occur.
- The client's stress of bringing the cat to the veterinary
hospital and then returning the cat to the home is undoubtedly perceived by the
cat. Despite our efforts, cat owner’s actions don't always do a good job
allaying feline anxiety. Often, we make it worse. Time and again, when clients
are planning on a vet visit, cats hide from owners "even before they get
the cat carrier out." Cats seem to have the ability to read us. They
indeed have a ‘sixth sense’.
- The patient returning from a visit to the clinic has
experienced a lot of stress. The cat may be experiencing pain from treatments
or surgery; additionally the cat may have altered physiological reactions due
to various administered drugs (even pain medications). The sympathetic nervous
system is ‘turned on’ and they want to hide, fight, or flee.
- Undoubtedly, new smells abound, but I suspect that fear
pheromones, postural changes, facial expressions, eye contact, and other
sympathetic reactions to the presence of other cats are far more important than
simply the new scents acquired at the veterinary clinic. While friendly
pheromones have been studied in cats, I am not aware that feline fear
pheromones have been demonstrated in this species1. On the other
hand, fear pheromones have been demonstrated in other species (man, cattle,
pigs, rats, & fish) so I expect they exist for cats2. There is even a
report suggesting that ‘feel good’ pheromones can have a negative effect in the
face of preexisting antagonism3. Many of us in
feline practice report that having a terrified cat in an exam room early in the
day seemingly triggers previous relaxed cats to be reactive for the remainder
of the day. I can’t imagine that adding new odors to a cat's coat will somehow
negate the presence of fear pheromones.
I can imagine that the application of additional smells would serve as
an additional stressor to both the cats returning home, and the others
accepting them.
My recommendation to avoid anticipated antagonistic reunions
is to isolate ALL potential antagonistic cats to a separate environment (e.g.
an isolated room). The returning cat is
given free access to all the 'normal' inhabited regions of the home, while the
others are confined to the ‘spare’ room.
Once the returning cat's behavior and physiology returns to normal, and
fear pheromones have dissipated, then the other cats can be let out, one at a
time. Depending on how serious the antagonistic
behavior is, this transition time could take 2 hours, or 2 days (or
more?). This time period also allows
the owner's subliminal behavior to return to normal, and it creates a situation
where the newly-isolated cats have to ask permission to be accepted back into
the normally inhabited home environment. I believe we reinforce antagonistic
behavior when the returning cat is isolated to the ‘spare’ room as this
furthers the need for this (treated and stressed) cat to get permission before
reuniting with the clowder.
If antagonistic cats are food motivated, then feeding them,
or offering them a treat during reunions may be helpful as well. Cat nip has a
variable effect on cats, and it will make some cats more aggressive so I would
somewhat discourage this.
My opinion as a feline practitioner is we should not be
trying to mask odors on our cats. Please pitch the perfume and toss the talc.
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