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Veterinary science is clear: Drugs do not teach new behaviors. A dog on fluoxetine still needs desensitization and counter-conditioning. The medication lowers the baseline anxiety so that learning can happen. This is the synergistic model: Veterinary pharmacology creates the biological window for behavioral modification to succeed.
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Research is unequivocal: Chronic pain triggers aggression. Osteoarthritis in dogs leads to aggression toward other dogs in the household because the arthritic dog anticipates pain during play. Dental pain in cats leads to "petting-induced aggression" (the cat bites when the owner touches a painful tooth socket). A veterinarian must perform a complete orthopedic and oral exam before diagnosing "dominance aggression" (a largely debunked concept). Veterinary science is clear: Drugs do not teach
You do not need to be a board-certified behaviorist to integrate this science into your daily practice. Here are three immediate applications for the general veterinary clinic:
For much of the 20th century, veterinary curricula treated behavior as a secondary subject, often overshadowed by surgery and pharmacology. Today, the "biopsychosocial" model of health dominates, acknowledging that an animal cannot be physically healthy in a vacuum of psychological distress. The integration of ethology (the scientific study of animal behavior) into veterinary science has transformed the veterinarian from a mere "mechanic" of the body into a holistic guardian of animal welfare. Dental pain in cats leads to "petting-induced aggression"
We love a lap cat. But there is a fine line between affection and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
If a cat kneads (the "biscuit-making" motion) for five minutes, that’s normal. If a cat suckles on wool blankets for three hours until the fabric is soaked and their tongue is raw, that’s a compulsive disorder. Similarly, a dog chasing a laser pointer is fun; a dog chasing shadows obsessively, ignoring food, is a clinical issue. overeating | POMC gene mutation
The Veterinary Connection: These behaviors often have a genetic or neurological basis. Certain breeds (Bull Terriers with tail chasing, Oriental cats with excessive grooming) are predisposed. In many cases, these OCD behaviors respond better to medication that regulates dopamine than to scolding.
| Breed | Behavior Concern | Medical Rule-Out | |-------|------------------|------------------| | Labrador Retriever | Pica, overeating | POMC gene mutation, polyphagia from diabetes | | Border Collie | Light chasing, compulsive spinning | Seizure disorders | | German Shepherd | Fear-based aggression | Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (chronic discomfort) | | Siamese cat | Excessive vocalization, pica | Hyperesthesia syndrome |
| Disorder | Key Signs | Common Differential Diagnoses | |----------|-----------|-------------------------------| | Separation anxiety | Destructiveness only when owner absent | Urinary incontinence, canine cognitive dysfunction | | Feline idiopathic cystitis | Urinating outside litter box, straining | Urolithiasis, UTI, bladder neoplasia | | Canine aggression | Growling, snapping, biting | Pain, hypothyroidism, brain tumor | | Compulsive disorder | Tail chasing, flank sucking, excessive grooming | Seizures, dermatological disease |