Tag Archives: Cats

Research Shows Cats Know Companion Cats’ Names

BREAKING NEWS: Cats are more aware of what’s happening around them than we realize.

A first of its kind study revealed that our kitty companions, who have the reputation for ignoring us, have actually been eavesdropping on us.

“I want people to know the truth. Felines do not appear to listen to people’s conversations, but as a matter of fact, they do,” lead researcher Saho Takagi said to The Asahi Shimbun.

New Research

Takagi’s research shows cats not only know their own names, they recognize the names of other cats in their home, and even their owner’s names. The study was published in the April 2022 issue of Scientific Reports.

“This research has shown that cats naturally learn the names of other individuals they live with through communication with humans. This is only possible if cats pay attention to human conversations, even when people are not speaking to them.”

Scientists selected 25 cats from homes with three or more cats. They placed the cats in front of a monitor and let them hear human voices calling the names of other felines they live with. Photos of the named cats, as well as those of unknown cats were then displayed on a monitor to examine the cats’ reaction.

When the name didn’t match the photo, the test kitties’ gaze would linger an average of a second longer on the image. As do humans, animals react to unexpected situations by taking more time to evaluate the information. The researchers believe that by staring at the incongruent photo longer, the test kitty is confused and is trying to better understand the situation.

Cats may appear to ignore you, but they pay attention to our conversations enough to know the names of companion cats (Shutterstock)

The survey also investigated whether kitties can distinguish various human family members. As with cat names, test cats tended to stare longer at the facial images of unnamed people.

Cat cafes

Researchers tried the same experiments on cats who lived in cat cafes, but they didn’t appear to know the names of fellow feline residents or their human caretakers. The team believed it was because so many cats live in the cafes that the names are used less frequently.

Bottom line: Fluffy may appear to be lost in thought, but he might more aware than you realize.

Martin de Porres Patron Saint of Treks & Vets

St. Martin de Porres

st martin de porres iconPatron Saint of Veterinarians, Rescuers, People of Color, Television, Hair Dressers & Trekkies

What do veterinarians, people of color, Trekkies and hairdressers have in common? In times of need they can all call upon St. Martin de Porres. He is one of the coolest saints around. The Dominican brother is recognized as the first black saint from the Americas.

Officially, he’s the patron saint of barbers, hair stylists, innkeepers, Mexico, black people, people of mixed race, Peru, poor people, public education, public health, and television (yes, the boob tube). He stands for interracial and social justice and racial harmony. (Certainly use his intercession with today’s racial strife.) People also invoke his name for protection from rats. Unofficially he represents veterinarians, Trekkies, holistic healers and people who are bullied.

Juan Martin de Porres was born 435 years ago today, on Dec. 9, 1579, in Lima, Peru. He was the illegitimate son of a woman of color (a freed Panamanian slave) named Ana Velázquez and the Spanish knight, Don Juan de Porres. Papa never married his baby mamma, and wasn’t proud that little Martin inherited his mother’s dark complexion. The “nobleman” abandoned his family three years later, after the birth of their daughter, Juana. What a guy! After Dad disappeared, poor Ana struggled to feed her kids by taking in laundry. Eventually Don Juan stepped up and sent his son to a primary school for a couple of years, after which 12-year-old Martin apprenticed as a barber.

As a trainee, he learned more than how to coif a mullet and sculpt a soul patch. In those days, barbers’ finely honed blades also opened veins for cozy sessions of bloodletting. Martin learned to perform surgeries, dig out ingrown toenails, lance boils, set bones, dress wounds, treat disease and compound medicine from herbs. The training gave him the ability to care for the sick and destitute without charging a fee.

martin de porresJust like Mr. Spock, St. Martin de Porres was able to be several places at once.

When he turned 15, Martin entered the Holy Rosary Dominican Priory in his hometown. At that time, Peruvian law prohibited descendants of Africans and Indians from becoming full members of religious orders. So Martin wore the monastery’s habit and performed worked in the infirmary as a barber-surgeon as well working on the farm and performing menial tasks in the kitchen and laundry.

In and outside the convent, Martin became known for his miraculous cures; he treated noblemen and slaves alike without regard for their race or social status.

When he turned 24, Martin took charge of the friary’s infirmary, where he worked until he died. He opened a children’s hospital for kids living in the slums and the Orphanage of the Holy Cross. Eventually the Dominicans ignored the racial restriction and allowed Martin to take vows as a Dominican brother.

 

A Real Dr. Doolittle

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERASt. Martin’s compassion wasn’t restricted to humans. He was a 16th-century Dr. Doolittle, with the ability to communicate with animals. Like St. Francis, Martin treated animals as if they were brothers and sisters. Only a Hannibal Lecter would chow down on his family, so Martin never ate meat. Centuries ahead of his time, the barber-turned-veterinarian treated sick and injured cats and dogs at his animal hospital set up at his sister’s home in the country. He also founded a shelter for stray pets.

While officially St. James the Greater, St. Eligius and St. Blaise are the patron saints of veterinarians, people with sick kitties and poopy pooches might want to have a conversation with Martin de Porres. After all, this guy was a practicing vet.

Of mice and Martin

Even potentially plague-carrying vermin benefited from St. Martin’s mercy. A mischief of mice set up housekeeping in the priory’s linen wardrobe. (And we know, nothing conveys the concept of “holy” like altar linens covered in mouse poop.) The monks wanted to poison the furry invaders, but St. Martin had other plans. Reminiscent of St. Francis’ negotiations with the killer wolf of Gubio, Martin simply promised not to promote the mice to Glory if they would relocate to a little den at the end of the garden. Martin even offered to cater their meals. Then, in a Peruvian version of the Pied Piper, he led Mickey’s cousins to their new digs. The mice stayed away from the linens, and Martin kept his part of the bargain.

Beam me up, Marty

spock cat gifMartin is the official patron saint of television and (appointed by me) unofficial saint of Trekkies. Stick with me on this.

While Martin wanted to serve as a missionary, this was not to be. But stories persisted describing Martin visiting those in need through bi-location (meaning he could safely fold clothes in the laundry in Peru while treating a patient in Algeria).

Five centuries before Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott was a gleam in Gene Roddenberry’s eye, Martin managed to transport himself around the globe. The word “television” means “vision from afar” in Greek. A man who bi-locates certainly represents that concept.

You might wonder if being in two places at the same time has something to do with those herbs he learned to compound in barber school. Probably not. The claims of his visitations came from the people he helped. Even though Martin never left Lima, people said the saint appeared to them in Algeria, China, France, Japan, Mexico and the Philippines.

Locked doors couldn’t keep Martin from caring for the sick. During an epidemic, sixty novice friars living in a locked section of the convent fell ill. Several of them reported seeing Martin pass through locked doors like Captain Kirk in the “Tholian Web.” These claims were even verified by monastery superiors.

In icons, St. Martin is usually depicted along with a cat, dog, and a mouse eating from the same bowl. He’s also associated with a broom (because of his love of manual labor), a crucifix, a rosary and/or a heart.

Nov. 3, 1639, Martin teleported from his corporeal body for the final time. He died of quatrain fever at his beloved Rosary Convent at the age of 59. The man who was rejected by society, and even his own father, was carried to his resting place by church prelates and noblemen. He was canonized by Pope John XXIII in 1962.

So next time you go to the vet, feel bullied, or watch a rerun of Star Trek, you might have a conversation with St. Martin de Porres. After all, he communicated with animals and bilocated to exotic places. He’s not likely to let a little thing like a grave come between him and someone in need.

If you want to learn more about this amazing man, visit Saint Martin de Porres – Patron of Social Justice.

Jeffy’s In the Mews: Cats Lose to Farting Dogs in Human Sleep Study

IN THE MEWS: Flawed Sleep Study Says Women Prefer Sleeping with Dogs

By JeffyJeffyBadBoy, Feline Investigative Reporter

Feline journalist JeffyJeffy demands reevaluation of the recent sleep study.



Who’s a good boy? Who’s a good boy? Who is the best sleep partner for women? Spoiler alert: We kitties come in third.

A recent study, published in the Journal of the International Society of Anthrozoology, concluded kitties aren’t the best sleeping partners for women, but neither are human significant others. Who then? Fideaux. Can you believe it? Stinky, snoring, farting dogs. Humans come in second. I hear that noise and emissions come from them, too. There’s no accounting for taste. As an independent journalist, I am contesting the findings and demanding a fairer rating system.

The study, “An Examination of Adult Women’s Sleep Quality and Sleep Routines in Relation to Pet Ownership and Bedsharing”, surveys 962 adult American women about their relationships and their sleep, 57% shared their bed with a human partner, 55% sleep with at least one dog and 31% spend the night with at least one cat.

(And what’s that about? There are way more pet kitties than dogs in the U.S. Why don’t we get to hog the bed like dogs do? I think the results are skewed. Why did they interview so few cat owners compared to human owners and dog owners. As a side note, no animal knows more about sleep than cats. Sixteen hours a day, baby!)

The study evaluated the sleep quality of women sharing their bed with a cat, a dog and another human and asked, which species provides the best night’s sleep? (In the spirit of full disclosure, I sleep with my boss and she only complains a couple of times a night about me pouncing on her feet and biting her toes.)

The ladies told researchers dogs were less disruptive to sleep than human partners and they felt more protected by a dog. Cats were more disruptive than human partners they didn’t feel protected. (Weighing in at 10 pounds it’s not like we kitties can take down that cat burglar.)

According to the study, dog owners tended to go to bed earlier and get up earlier than those who only had cats. Duh. They had to get up early to take the dog for a pee. We kitties manage to take care of our “needs”. So who’s really disrupting sleep?

The study didn’t say anything about canine flatulence or cover-stealing. I think they need to look into that.

Wanna read the study?

“An Examination of Adult Women’s Sleep Quality and Sleep Routines in Relation to Pet Ownership and Bedsharing,” authored by Christy L. Hoffman, etal can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/08927936.2018.1529354

Five Easy Steps toward a Disaster Plan for Your Cat and Dog

No nasty emails please. This was from my blog on the potential movie, Catnado. Syfy turned it down. No cats were harmed in the making of the photo. Photo by Dusty Rainbolt.

 

It’s hurricane season…again, and Hurricane Florence  has North Carolina in her cross hairs. Regardless of where you live, or which disasters you could face, you need a disaster plan that include your pets?

On March 29, 2017 the weather in north Texas was crazy. I was happily dreaming, but I bolted to life when my severe weather app shrieked. “A tornado has been spotted in your area.”

This is what we woke up to. We had 11 minutes before the tornado made it to Flower Mound. Graphic courtesy of the National Weather Service Fort Worth.

 

My hubby went back to sleep, but I dashed downstairs to check the weather radar.The map displayed a little red triangle and an arrow aiming right for our home. The timeline said the tornado would reach Flower Mound in 11 minutes. Holy flying cat crap, Batman. My dog and cats looked at me as if to say, “So what’s the plan?”

The good news is: I have a disaster plan that includes my pets. The bad news is: I’d never actually tested it until now. The moment of truth approached along with the tornado. I grabbed a handful of designated emergency pillowcases, and then sprinted upstairs to roust my sleeping hubby out of bed. He monitored weather reports while I shanghaied unwilling cats into the pillowcases.

Pillowcases make excellent cat containers in an emergency
The cat’s out of the bag. Herman after the National Weather Service issued the all-clear. Photo by Dusty Rainbolt.

 

Thank God, two minutes before the estimated time of disaster, the National Weather Service canceled tornado warning. (The Flower Mound saved us again!) A few moments later 60 to 80 mph straight-line winds hit us, but other than losing some branches off our oak tree, we were fine. A block away, trees were ripped apart. Two miles from my home, Lewisville got nailed by an EF-1 tornado. When we got the all-clear, we opened the pillowcases. (The cats were literally out of the bag.)  They trotted out in the open, confused, but relatively unruffled.

Straight line wind damage in Flower Mound.
Although their house was undamaged, the crazy strong straight-line winds took down this live oak. Photo by Dusty Rainbolt.

 

While I discovered some kinks in my emergency preparedness plan, overall, it worked pretty well. Whew.

A few future tweaks include attaching zip ties to the pillowcases so we can secure the cats and better placement of flashlights. (I have a full-blown evacuation plan too involving checklists, pillowcases, carriers, go bags, emergency food and loading the car. Complicated, but at least I have one.)

Do you have an emergency plan for your pets?  You may not have tornadoes in your area, but you may have to worry about earthquakes, lightning, floods, hazardous chemical spills, wildfires or attacks by cantankerous bigfoot gangs. No matter how safe you feel in your home, you’re at risk of something.

More straight-line wind damge in Flower Mound.
A few doors down this live oak was split down the middle by straight-line winds. Photo by Dusty Rainbolt.

 

Developing a practical disaster plan

I suspect most people never put a plan together because, according to articles on disaster preparation (including my own), a good plan is complicated and expensive. Don’t be overwhelmed. A simple plan beats no plan at all. So here are five things you can do to keep your pets safe during an emergency.

#1 Have a container for every pet.

Would it be better if you had a $70 carrier or crate for every animal? Of course. However, you may not have the finances or the space. Besides, when the carrier comes out, most cats hide because it usually portends a trip to the vet. A pillowcase makes a fabulous and free alternative in a life and death emergency. Kitties don’t have that negative association with a pillowcase. Pick ‘em up; drop ‘em in. Twist the open end. Taadaa. Contained kitty. (Next time I’ll use zip ties to keep them inside. That will free my hubby to do other things.) When it was safe, we opened the pillowcases. The cats were literally out of the bag.  They emerged confused, but relatively unruffled.

Pillowcases can easily stand in for a carrier
Pillowcases made cheap and easy-to-use cat containers in an emergency situation. Photo by Dusty Rainbolt.

 

If you have 20 cats, get 20 emergency-dedicated pillowcases. I bought my large collection from a thrift store for fifty cents each. Now that’s affordable. Always keep them in the same easy-to-access location so you don’t have to rummage through the linen closet, dirty clothes hamper, the basement or clothes dryer to find them.

#2 Assign jobs.

My husband monitored the weather warnings while I rounded up the cats. He kept them secure in their sacks until we got the all-clear from the National Weather Service.

#3 Confine your pets when you get a warning.

Severe weather or a brush fire headed your way? Put everyone in a small room or bathroom with no (or few) hiding places. When you either have to take cover or bug out, you won’t have to track everyone down. Many cats and dogs hide when unfriendly weather or other threats approach.

#4 Post a list of all your pets.

Do a roll call as you gather your fur babies and check off whenever you locate and confine one. You don’t want to accidentally leave someone out.

#5 Practice different emergencies in your mind.

Yes, it would be better if you actually held emergency drills, but if you’re not going to physically go through the process, then at least mentally work the scenarios. Talk to your family and get their input and ideas.

In the event of a fire or tornado, seconds count. Simple preparations ahead of a potential disaster may save your pet’s life and even your own.

Do you have a disaster plan? What are your concerns about dealing with an emergency? Tell me about your emergency concerns or preparations in the comments section below.

_________________________________

About Dusty Rainbolt

Author Dusty Rainbolt is an award-winning veterinary journalist according to her answering machine. She is an associate certified cat behavior consultant and member of International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants, as well as past president of the Cat Writers’ Association. Her books, columns, reviews and articles have been honored with more than 50 writing awards including three-time recipient of Friskies Writer of the Year. Her just-released cat behavior book, Cat Scene Investigator: Solve Your Cat’s Litter Box Mystery, is the consummate guide for dealing with a cat who sidesteps his/her appointed toilet. CSI, which provides science-based methods for determining the medical or behavioral causes of feline inappropriate elimination, teaches cat parents to view their cat’s litter box avoidance through the eyes of a detective to determine the cause and, ultimately, the remedy.

Ghost Cats now on sale

Some cats won’t let a little thing like death separate them from their humans. ~ Dusty Rainbolt author of Ghost Cats

Ghost Cats was the winner of the Cat Writers’ Association Muse Medallion for the year’s best book on a miscellaneous topic

 

Ghost Cats: Human Encounters with Feline Spirits Revised Edition is now available.

Many cat lovers believe these amazing creatures possess mystical powers that reach beyond what we can see and touch. But can cats extend a paw from beyond the grave?

Award-winning GHOST CATS is an original collection of heartwarming, and sometimes heart-stopping, accounts of cats who connected with their loved ones for a final time—ghost encounters of the feline kind. From the chilling “Demon Cat of the Nation’s Capitol” to the comical “Phantom Litter Box” to the reassuring “Grungy’s Greeting”, there are feline phantasms for everyone.

And if you believe you have heard, seen or felt your very own departed kitty, author Dusty Rainbolt, one of the country’s leading authorities on animal apparitions, offers reasons why your best forever friend breeched that tenuous veil to reach you again.

ABOUT GHOST CATS

People who have spent a lifetime observing and interacting with cats will say that these amazing animals seem to possess powers – supernatural, psychic, or otherwise – that we can only begin to comprehend. But are they able to return from the grave as well?

In Ghost Cats, the strangely heartwarming tales of cats who have refused to let death part them from their human companions are recounted in vivid and captivating detail. From the chilling “Demon Cat of the Nation’s Capitol” to the delightful “Phantom Litter Box” to the touching “Poor Puss” of Stonehenge, there’s a plethora of phantasms here for everyone. And what if you receive bedtime visitations from your very own dearly departed kitty? Author Dusty friend explains all the signs of a haunting and offers reasons why your friend has come back.

A thrilling read for the cat and ghost lovers among us, and a consolation for those who have lost a beloved pet, this collection of stories confirms that these wonderful, whiskered creatures capture our imagination as much as they do our hearts, long after they have purred their last.

OVERCOMING GRIEF

Do you still feel your cat’s presence? Have you heard him meow or the jingle of his collar bell? You are not alone. Many bereaved cat owners and some bewildered non-owners have experienced the patter of paws or felt the presence of paranormal pets.

People coping with the loss of a pet (or human), know the grief can feel overwhelming. The 70 plus encounters shared in this book have encouraged the inconsolable and given hope to the hopeless. We will see our beloved cats again.

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING ABOUT GHOST CATS

“Decades of tending rescue and foster cats and kittens make Dusty Rainbolt the cat companion’s go-to expert on feline health, happiness, and behavior. And that includes stunning examples of cats’ extra-sensory sensitivity we all glimpse and often too easily dismiss. Ghost Cats will make you wonder if any of our cats are ever really ‘lost’ to us.” ~ Carole Nelson Douglas, author of the Midnight Louie Feline PI Mysteries

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

A former card-carrying skeptic, Dusty started investigating paranormal phenomena after her recently passed foster kitten named Maynard returned for a brief one-time afterlife experience. Dusty Rainbolt is an award-winning cat writer who has worked as a professional freelance journalist since the late 1980s.

Dusty is the author of the just-released book that helps rectify feline inappropriate elimination, Cat Scene Investigator: Solve Your Cat’s Litter Box Mystery (Stupid Gravity Press), as well as Kittens for Dummies and Cat Wrangling Made Easy: Maintaining Peace & Sanity in Your Multicat Home. She also penned the award-winning paranormal mystery, Death Under the Crescent Moon (Yard Dog Press). Her scifi fans know Dusty for her comedy novel All the Marbles and as well as the outrageous The Four Redheads of the Apocalypse fantasy series she coauthored with Linda L. Donahue, Rhonda Eudaly and Julia S. Mandala. She’s past president of the Cat Writers’ Association, and three-time recipient of the Friskies Writer of the Year. She is editor-in-chief of AdoptAShelter.com, past product editor for the Tuft’s University publication, Catnip and Whole Cat Journal. Over her career, over 1500 of her columns and articles have appeared in magazines, books, newsletters and websites.

Dusty’s a member of the International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants. She and her husband share their unhaunted home with their living, breathing cats and a Pug-mix. Involved in kitten rescue for over three decades, she has successfully raised over 800 orphan kittens. Unfortunately not all of the bottle babies made it. One in particular changed her life.

Check out her website at DustyCatWriter.com. She’d love to hear your cat, dog, and horse ghost stories.

 

Spring Forward with Cats—The Daylight Savings Time Dilemma

 

Weems S. Hutto
George dreads those late dinners after Daylight Savings Time makes us spring forward.

 

Oh joy. It’s spring. That means allergy season is upon us. Worse still, the second Sunday in March (this Sunday morning) prompts us mindless lemmings to “spring forward” into Daylight Savings Time. A few hours later my alarm clock will roust me from my bed kicking and screaming. It’s like having jet lag without the benefit of a trip. I guess you can tell I’m not a fan of the twice a year time change.

Daylight Savings Time is Hazardous to Your Health

While most of us love that extra hour of sleep we gain when the clocks fall back in November, our bodies never quite make the adjustment to the springtime sleep deprivation jump.

Research shows the time change may actually create health problems. According to a 2014 study  published in the medical journal Open Heart, on the Monday following the change to Daylight Savings Time, the number of heart attacks increase by 24 percent over a normal Monday. There’s also an increase in suicide risk for vulnerable individuals. An Australian study concluded that male suicides increase in the weeks following Daylight Savings Time. A 2009 study published in the Journal of Applied Psychology found that, on the Monday after we spring forward, workers were more frequently injured than on a normal Monday. Also those injuries were more serious.

(Please Texas Legislature, get rid of this plague on Texans.)

Whining Session Over

Alright, I’m done complaining.  My point is: there are real issues for people who have to alter their schedule to accommodate the time change. Humans are ruled by a circadian rhythm, our biological clock. When Daylight Savings Time disrupts your body’s natural schedule, you can experience anxiety. As it turns out, your cat and dog can, too.

The internal clocks of wild animals are ruled by natural sunlight, and the rising and setting of the sun. As a survival mechanism free-roaming cats are creatures of habit. They live by a strict time schedule throughout the day to prevent unfortunate encounters with adversaries. Indoor cats still rigidly cling to that need for a predictable schedule.

Fluffy’s daily schedule is inextricably linked to yours: feeding time, playtime, clean litter box time and bedtime. Since he can’t hunt for food, he’s concerned about when you get up to feed him, and when you get home…to feed him. If you arbitrarily start rising an hour earlier, he wonders, “What the rat?”

After all, the sun still rises and sets according to Fluffy’s Solar Standard Time. If you’re late returning from work (according to his internal clock), he may fear he’ll starve, and that’s stressful.

Reducing Fluffy’s Stress

Cats hate when we spring forward
Feeding Time

Instead of changing his schedule all at once, transition to the new routine over a week or so. Wake-up time 10 or 15 minutes earlier every couple of days. Between now and Sunday, feed Fluffy a few minutes sooner until he’s eating at the new feeding time. Or, slowly do away with a fixed dinnertime altogether. Vary it by 15 or 20 minutes either way. This will also help reduce stress later if you get caught in traffic or stop to have dinner with a friend.

Instead of a regular dinner hour, offer your kitty food puzzles. He can eat whenever hungry rather than dwelling on the fact that your 60 minutes late. He’ll get used to working for his food. Food balls also reduce stress, boredom and destructive behaviors.

Medication

If your cat takes medicine, call your your vet about changing the time you pill him. Most of the time, a one-hour change won’t cause a problem. That may not be true of cats who need insulin injections or seizure meds. Early doses of insulin could lead to low blood sugar levels. Insulin administration is based on Fluffy’s mealtime and should be given every 12 hours, so ask Doc about mealtime too. She can give you instructions about easing into a new schedule.

Litter Box Maintenance

We all want a clean bathroom. Since you’ll arrive home an hour later than usual, the litter box will go unflushed even longer, give it a quick scoop before you leave for work and again when you get home. Both Fluffy and your carpet will appreciate.

Snuggle Time

Let’s face it, Daylight Savings Time isn’t the end of the world for even the most sensitive of kitties. But giving Fluffy a little extra attention during that irritating transitionperiod will probably make adjusting easier for both of you.

How does the transition to Daylight Saving Time affect your cat? What do you  do to help him? Tell me about it in the comment section below.

_________________________________

About Dusty Rainbolt

Author Dusty Rainbolt is an award-winning veterinary journalist according to her answering machine. She is an associate certified cat behavior consultant and member of International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants, as well as past president of the Cat Writers’ Association. Her books, columns, reviews and articles have been honored with more than 50 writing awards including three-time recipient of Friskies Writer of the Year. Her just-released cat behavior book, Cat Scene Investigator: Solve Your Cat’s Litter Box Mystery, is the consummate guide for dealing with a cat who sidesteps his/her appointed toilet. CSI, which provides science-based methods for determining the medical or behavioral causes of feline inappropriate elimination, teaches cat parents to view their cat’s litter box avoidance through the eyes of a detective to determine the cause and, ultimately, the remedy.

Research Offers Hope for Cats and People with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Spot lost his fight with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy just one month first showing symptoms.

 

Early drug trial shows promise as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy treatment

According to researchers at the University of California at Davis (UC Davis), there’s promise on the horizon for kitties struggling with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). HCM is an inherited disease that causes the heart walls to thicken with potentially fatal consequences. The thickening of the ventricle (pump muscle), interferes with the flow of blood. This can cause the heart to beat too rapidly, too slowly or irregularly. The heart muscle can suffer from oxygen starvation that may cause heart cells to die.

In many HCM cases, fluid may accumulate in the lung causing rapid or labored breathing, open-mouthed breathing, or lethargy. Many HCM cats appear to be perfectly healthy with no observable symptoms. In some cats, the first hint of a problem is sudden death.

HCM occurs in one in 500 humans. It’s also the most commonly diagnosed cardiac disease in kitties, affecting a staggering one in seven cats. HCM is more prevalent in some cat breeds including Maine Coons and Ragdolls.

lack of treatment for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Cats

Currently there is no cure or therapy that can change the course of the HCM. Veterinarians can only treat the symptoms with medications that are used to prevent blood clots, improve blood flow, control heart rate and reduce fluid accumulation in the lungs. According to the study, septal myectomy, a surgery that removes the portion of the septum obstructing the flow of blood from the left ventricle, can improve the symptoms and heart function, but it’s invasive, expensive and can only be performed by a specialist.

The heartbreak of cardiomyopathy

MeiMei, a white and brown tabby was rescued off the street by Brooklyn cat behavior consultant, Beth Adelman. When MeiMei was around 3 years, she was diagnosed with HCM. Adelman and their veterinary cardiologist treated the disease as aggressively as possible. “She took all the medications that humans take. The disease progressively got worse,” Adelman said. While medication treated MeiMei’s symptoms, it couldn’t halt the progression of the disease. Still, MeiMei survived a miraculous six years.

MYK-461 gives cats with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy like Spot hope.

 

Spot wasn’t as lucky, The Siamese-mix suddenly began displaying signs of illness when he was a few weeks shy of one year. An echocardiogram confirmed her vet’s fear; Spot suffered from an advanced case of HCM. Like Adelman, Spot’s owner also treated the disease aggressively as possible, however Spot lost his struggle only one month later.

Hope on the horizon

Now that we’re all depressed about the bad news; here’s the good news. In a breakthrough “proof of concept” trial involving five HCM cats, researchers found that the drug MYK-461 eliminated left-ventricle obstruction in all the test kitties. The study, supported by a National Institute of Health grant, was published December 14, 2016  in the scientific journal PLOSONE. This novel drug is the first in its class and actually addresses the functional changes that occur in human and feline HCM, rather than simply reducing the symptoms.

“This is an exciting discovery for both animals and humans,” Associate Professor Joshua Stern. He is chief of Cardiology Service at the UC Davis Veterinary hospital. “The positive result in these five cats shows that MYK-461 is viable for use in cats as a possible option to halt or slow the progression of HCM.”

“There has been little to no progress in advancing the treatment of HCM in humans or animals for many years,” Dr. Stern said. “This study brings new hope for cats and people.”

With such promising results, UC Davis researchers hope to conduct a clinical trial in the near future, which could determine if MYK-461 has the potential to become the accepted protocol for the care of cats with HCM.

Have you lost a human or feline friend to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy? Tell me about them in the comments below.

About Dusty Rainbolt

Author Dusty Rainbolt is an award-winning veterinary journalist according to her answering machine. She is an associate certified cat behavior consultant and member of International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants, as well as past president of the Cat Writers’ Association. Her books, columns, reviews and articles have been honored with more than 50 writing awards including three-time recipient of Friskies Writer of the Year. Her just-released cat behavior book, Cat Scene Investigator: Solve Your Cat’s Litter Box Mystery, is the consummate guide for dealing with a cat who sidesteps his/her appointed toilet. CSI, which provides science-based methods for determining the medical or behavioral causes of feline inappropriate elimination, teaches cat parents to view their cat’s litter box avoidance through the eyes of a detective to determine the cause and, ultimately, the remedy.

 

Study Shows Cats Don’t Hold Grudge For Diet

__Shady 041 wide load
When Shady arrived at our house, she was a big, black blob. Like the cats in the study, she didn’t hold a grudge. After she lost six pounds she was more active and affectionate.

 

A new study suggests that your cat won’t hold a grudge if you put him on a diet. Once he’s lost some weight, he may actually become more affectionate.

Obesity is a growing problem (pun intended)—humans, cats, dogs—it doesn’t matter. In our land of plenty, the proof is around the beltline. While it’s wonderful that our pets don’t have go to bed hungry like their wild or stray counterparts, obesity shortens their lives and compromises their quality of life. Excess weight contributes to diabetes, cardiac disease, arthritis and any number of other illnesses.

No doubt, if you have a portly puss, your vet has been after you to reduce Fluffy’s flab. But how can you cut back on the feed when you see those big pathetic eyes staring at you, begging like Oliver Twist, “Please, sir. I want some more.”

After all, we humans biologically equate food with love. The first thing any mother does after the birth of a baby is feed it. Dads (and Moms) work hard to bring home the bacon. To most people, the idea of withholding food conveys the opposite of love. We fear that our kitties will blame us for starving them, and punish us by withholding affection.

Take heart, a new study out of Cornell University of Veterinary Medicine suggests you can cut back on the amount of food your cat eats without sacrificing his love. The study, “Owner’s perception of changes in behaviors associated with dieting in fat cats,” was published November 2015 in the online Journal of Veterinary Behavior. The study followed 58 obese cats over eight weeks. The owners recorded pre-feeding behaviors like begging, following, meowing, pacing, swatting, hissing and stealing food, as well as after-dinner behaviors such as jumping the in lap, purring, resting, sleeping, and using litter box.

_Shady Measurements IMG_7540Not only did the study, headed by Emily D. Levine, find that cats don’t hold a grudge for reducing their daily intake, after they lost weight most of the study kitties tended to be more affectionate to their humans.

At the four-week mark, owners noticed an increase of begging, meowing, and pacing before the meal, but those annoying behaviors didn’t begin earlier in the day.  So Fluffy may crank up the intensity, but he didn’t drag out your agony.

Once weight loss began, there was an increase of after-dinner affection like jumping in the owners’ lap. At eight weeks purring increased significantly, and begging decreased. Thank goodness.

While I didn’t participate in the study, I had a similar experience. Four years ago, I took in a 22-pound foster cat named Shady. Poor thing was a fat, black blob, incapable of getting on the sofa even with a cat ramp. The former owner, who had Shady declawed, surrendered the four-year old kitty because the other cats bullied her mercilessly. Totally defenseless and unable to get away, Shady could only sit there and endure the abuse.

I worked with my vet, and Shady lost six pounds over four months. She still looks enormous at 16 pound, but now Shady can jump into our laps or onto the bed or the sofa to solicit attention. She plays and even climbs the stairs to our second floor. (In case you were wondering what happened to Shady she’s asleep on our bed. We recently adopted her.)

__Shady 013

Never put your kitty on a crash diet. While weight loss will help your cat live longer and feel better, rapid weight loss could cause rapid weight loss can release fat into the bloodstream, causing deadly fatty liver disease. Work with your vet. Slow steady weight loss, monitored by your vet, is the only safe way to go.

Researchers Determine Boxes Reduce Feline Stress

Boxes Reduce Feline StressGroucho box cute meme IMG_3069Are you one of the 58% of cat owners who give your cats Christmas or birthday presents? Were you disappointed when Fluffy ignored the wildly expensive cat toy in favor of sitting in the container came in?

It’s no surprise that cats love boxes and sacks. It’s long been suspected that kitties’ magnetic attraction to boxes is because they’re ambush predators. But cats are also prey, and boxes (or other cranny) offer a great place from which to bushwhack dinner and a safe place to get away from larger carnivores. But recently researchers have determined that boxes reduce feline stress.

_IMG_7395 fluffy amazon boxIn a 2014, behavioral biologist Claudia M. Vinke, Ph.D. headed a Dutch study about reducing stress in shelter cats. Vinke’s team gave boxes to some new cats being admitted to a shelter. A control group received no boxes. The study found that cats who received a hiding box recovered faster in a new stressful environment than cats without boxes.

In an email interview, Dr. Vinke said, “As behavioral biologists we are always eager to explain questions from the perspective of the biology of the species.”

She said in a stressful situation a cat’s first reaction is “to withdraw and hide. So quite probably, hiding is a behavioral strategy to cope with environmental, challenges and stressors.”

Groucho Fluffy box copyright  IMG_3062According to Dr. Vinke, as with many other species, fight is another coping option, but for the cat, fighting is a risky strategy. A cat risks becoming injured during combat. Dr. Vinke says, “The size of box doesn’t matter; it’s perceived as a safe hiding place.”

The study concluded that “the hiding box appears to be important enrichment for the cat to cope effectively with stressors in a new shelter environment the first weeks after arrival.”

Rescuers, shelters and vet offices, please take note: Your best feline enrichment and stress relief tool will be arriving at no charge with your next Amazon order.

Super Bowl Pet Safety

.Super Bowl

 

It’s Super Bowl Sunday; so as you prepare the snack and ice down the beer, keep in mind Super Bowl Pet Safety.  Like any other holiday, it’s a time for family and friends get together to drink, eat and cheer for their team. Unfortunately, many of those same party foods can be dangerous for your pet. Here are a few tips to keep your kitties safe and comfortable during the festivities.

  • Remember kitties don’t appreciate chaos.  Keep your pets away from open doors. While guests are coming and going, your cat or dog may dart outside.
  • Sequester your cat to a quiet room with his food and water, litter box, some toys a towel or tee shirt with your scent and his favorite toys.
  • Give your pets water only. Alcohol is toxic to dogs and cats. Even a few ounces of beer can cause ethanol poisoning.
  • Feed your pets only their food or appropriate treats. Many traditional Super Bowl delicacies contain garlic, onion, salt and avocado which can cause a variety of serious health problems. If you enjoy a bowl of hot wings, dispose of the bones in an outside trash can. Bones can cause intestinal obstructions. Also don’t let guests give your pets chocolate or sodas or anything containing Xylitol.
  • If you must share in the festivities, let them indulged in some commercial pet treats or some turkey baby food (without garlic) or some low-sodium deli turkey.

 

Good luck. May the best team win. Keep Super Bowl pet safety in mind and everyone wins (sort of.) As for me, I’ll record the game and watch the commercials. I’m looking forward to watching the Puppy Bowl. Go Dachshunds. Go Kitties.