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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Behavior and lifestyle changes in cats with joint pain

By Bennett, David & Morton, Carolyn·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2009·Institute of Comparative Medicine, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A study of owner observed behavioural and lifestyle changes in cats with musculoskeletal disease before and after analgesic therapy.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 23 cats with chronic pain in their joints or muscles were observed by their owners before and after starting treatment with a pain medication called meloxicam. Owners noticed significant improvements in their cats' behavior and lifestyle after 28 days, particularly in how active their cats were. Both the owners and veterinarians agreed that the cats showed less pain and improved behavior after treatment. This suggests that paying attention to changes in a cat's daily activities can help identify chronic pain and the effectiveness of pain relief treatments.

People also search for: cat chronic pain signs · meloxicam for cats · how to tell if my cat is in pain

Abstract

This study describes the use of a simple questionnaire-based tool to identify behavioural/lifestyle changes that are associated with chronic pain in the cat. These changes were grouped into four behavioural domains (mobility, activity, grooming and temperament). Twenty-three cats with chronic musculoskeletal pain as determined by clinical examination were included. The owners of these cats were asked to complete a questionnaire before and 28 days after the start of analgesic treatment (meloxicam). This included a global assessment of changes in behaviour and assessment of the degree of behavioural change observed within each of the defined domains. The attending veterinary surgeon was independently asked to provide a global score before and after treatment. Both owners and veterinary surgeons reported significant changes in behaviour/lifestyle after analgesic therapy. There was no difference between the owners and veterinary surgeons global assessments at baseline but there was at day 28 (P=0.02). The owners' scores decreased from a median of 5 at baseline to 3 at 28 days (P=0.0004) while the median veterinary surgeon scores decreased from 5 to 2 at 28 days (P<0.0001). There was a statistically significant reduction in the owners' scores for each of the four domains with the greatest reduction occurring in the activity category (P=0.0001). This study shows that owner assessment of changes in their cat's behaviour/lifestyle is an important method of identifying chronic pain in their pets.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19910231/