Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Best treatments for stopping cats from urine spraying indoors
By Mills, Daniel S et al.·Published in PloS one·2011·Department of Biological Sciences, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A meta-analysis of studies of treatments for feline urine spraying.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
Many cat owners struggle with their pets spraying urine inside the house, which can be frustrating. A review of several studies found that treatments like fluoxetine, clomipramine, and pheromonatherapy (a synthetic scent that mimics cat facial pheromones) can help reduce or stop this behavior in many cats. In fact, these treatments showed a significant improvement, with many cats ceasing or greatly reducing their spraying. If your cat is having this issue, discussing these treatment options with your veterinarian could lead to a more peaceful home.
People also search for: why is my cat spraying · cat urine spraying treatment · pheromones for cat behavior · fluoxetine for cats · clomipramine for cat spraying
Abstract
Feline urine spraying inside the home is a common problem behaviour that owners seek advice for from veterinarians. Individual trials relating to a variety of interventions produce variable results, and to date, no consensus on the value of different treatments has emerged. This study therefore aimed to meta-analyse, current data from appropriate published clinical trials that evaluate treatments for feline urine spraying.Inclusion and exclusion criteria for study selection were predefined and methodological quality was assessed by two independent reviewers. Ten studies in nine publications that either evaluated pharmacotherapy or pheromonatherapy (the use of a synthetic analogue of the F3 facial fraction in the cat) were suitable for analysis. There was a significant (P<0.001) association between the use of any intervention and the number of cats that ceased or reduced urine spraying by at least 90%. Analysis by intervention type indicated that fluoxetine, clomipramine and pheromonatherapy may each assist in managing urine spraying beyond a placebo based intervention.This is the first time meta-analytical techniques have been used and reported to evaluate the efficacy of interventions used in veterinary behavioural medicine, and it has established confidence in the value of both conventional treatments (pharmacotherapy) and a more recently developed treatment modality (pheromonatherapy) as an adjunct to the management of this problem. It is suggested that future research into treatment efficacy for this problem uses the benchmark standard of randomised, controlled trials lasting for at least 8 weeks, with the outcome criteria of cessation of feline urine spraying or reduction by at least 90%.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21525994/