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No subgroup benefits more from the marriage of animal behavior and veterinary science than domestic cats. Cats are mesopredators—they are both predator and prey. As such, they are masters of masking pain. A wild cat that shows weakness is eaten. Consequently, your indoor cat will eat, play, and groom herself right up until she is critically ill.

Veterinary behaviorists have taught us to look for "subtle shifts":

By watching the behavior, the vet knows where to look. By looking at the science, the vet knows how to treat.

A 2021 study in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association found that nearly 80% of dogs referred for "idiopathic aggression" (aggression with no known cause) had a previously undiagnosed orthopedic or visceral pain condition. No subgroup benefits more from the marriage of

A dog with hip dysplasia may snap when you touch its lower back. A cat with dental resorption lesions may bite when you try to look at its teeth. The behavior is not the problem; it is the only language the animal has to say "that hurts."

Veterinary protocol: Any sudden onset of aggression in an adult animal should trigger a full physical workup, including radiographs and a pain trial (e.g., a few weeks of NSAIDs) before a behavioral diagnosis is made.

Veterinary science has largely caught up to human psychiatry in terms of pharmacologic intervention for behavior disorders. However, a behavioral vet knows that you cannot medicate boredom or lack of training. Drugs are a tool to lower the anxiety threshold so the learning can begin. By watching the behavior, the vet knows where to look

Common veterinary psychopharmaceuticals include:

The golden rule of veterinary behavioral science: Start low, go slow, and always pair the drug with behavior modification.

One of the most impactful collaborations between behaviorists and veterinarians is the Low-Stress Handling movement. Traditional restraint methods (scruffing cats, tipping tables, or forcing a scared dog into a "down") often worsen fear, creating a cycle of aggression and avoidance. The golden rule of veterinary behavioral science: Start

Behavioral science has provided alternatives:

The result? Safer veterinary teams, less distressed animals, and more accurate diagnostic data (a fearful cat’s heart rate and blood pressure are clinically useless).