| Literature DB >> 35909687 |
Lingna Zhang1, Zhaowei Bian1, Qingshen Liu1, Baichuan Deng1.
Abstract
Domestic cats are descended from solitary wild species and rely heavily on the olfaction system and chemical signals for daily activities. Cats kept as companion animals may experience stress due to a lack of predictability in their physical or social environment. The olfactory system is intimately connected to the brain regions controlling stress response, thus providing unique opportunities for olfactory strategies to modify stress and related behavioral problems in cats. However, the olfactory intervention of stress in cats has been mainly focused on several analog chemical signals and studies often provide inconsistent and non-replicable results. Supportive evidence in the literature for the potentially effective olfactory stimuli (e.g., cheek and mammary gland secretions, and plant attractants) in treating stress in cats was reviewed. Limitations with some of the work and critical considerations from studies with natural or negative results were discussed as well. Current findings sometimes constitute weak evidence of a reproducible effect of cat odor therapy for stress. The welfare application of an olfactory stimulus in stress alleviation requires a better understanding of its biological function in cats and the mechanisms at play, which may be achieved in future studies through methodological improvement (e.g., experiment pre-registration and appropriate control setting) and in-depth investigation with modern techniques that integrate multisource data. Contributions from individual and environmental differences should be considered for the stress response of a single cat and its sensitivity to olfactory manipulation. Olfactory strategies customized for specific contexts and individual cats can be more effective in improving the welfare of cats in various stressful conditions.Entities:
Keywords: cat stress; chemical signals; olfaction; pheromone; welfare
Year: 2022 PMID: 35909687 PMCID: PMC9334771 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2022.928943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Common behavioral signs and triggers of stress in cats.
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| Acute stress | Anxious posture, shaking, fast ventilation, fully dilated pupil and flattened ears, tail close to the body, plaintive vocalization ( | Bath ( | |
| Prolonged/chronic stress | Sickness behavior, (e.g., vomiting) | Changed caretaking routine ( | |
| Anorexia | Long-term sheltering ( | ||
| House soiling problem ( | In appropriate elimination ( | Social conflict, blocked access to the litterbox ( | |
| Fecal marking ( | Outdoor and indoor social conflicts ( | ||
| Urine marking ( | Lower urinary tract disorders ( | ||
| Depression-like symptom (e.g., inactivity) | Long-term sheltering ( | ||
| Aggression ( | Social conflicts ( | ||
| Stereotypic behavior (e.g., over grooming or self-mutilation, tail biting, and obsessive vocalization) ( | Stress from chronic disease, environmental and social conflict ( | ||
Figure 1Stress response in cats. Upon the detection of an aversive stimulus or stressor, two major components of stress response, the sympathetic-adreno-medullar (SAM) and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis will be activated, resulting in the release of mediating hormones, including mainly fast acting catecholamines from the SAM axis, and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), arginine vasopressin (AVP), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol from the HPA axis. The stress response coordinates physiological and behavioral changes to assist the restoring of organism homeostasis from the interference of stressors. When adaption is not achieved, sustained stress response can cause physiological and psychological pathological conditions.
Scent stimuli with potential stress-reducing and/or enriching effect for cats.
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| F3/Feliway™ | Cat cheek/sebaceous gland | Oleic acid, azelaic acid, pimelic acid, palmitic acid | Object marking | Putative effect of reducing urine spraying/marking ( |
| Appeasing pheromone/Feliway® Multicat or Feliway® Felifriend | Queen mammary sulcus/ skin sebaceous gland during nursing | Oleic acid, palmitic acid, linoleic acid, myristic acid, lauric acid, and stearic acid | Appeasing the queen and kittens | Reduce inter-cat aggression in multi-cat household ( |
| Pedal/ Feliway® Feliscratch™ | Cat interdigital area/skin sebaceous gland | Valeric acid, lactic acid and, linoleic acid | Territory marking | Induce scratching when applied to scratching posts ( |
| Prey odor | Rat, rabbit | Odor mixture | Induce predatory or play behavior | Inconclusive results in captive cats ( |
| Rabbit maternal-neonatal pheromone | 2-methyl-2-butenal (2M2B) | Unknown | Improve use of litter box and reduced aggression in pair-housed cats when applied to litter box ( | |
| Familiar interspecific scent | Mostly from owner | Odor mixture | Comforting effect | Not effective during the strange situation test ( |
| Cat attractant | Plant such as catnip and silver vine | e.g., Neptalactone in catnip; isoiridomyrmecin and dihydronepetalactone in silver vine | Chemical defense against mosquitoes | Inducing play behavior in a proportion of adult cats ( |