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Complete Care for Your Aging Cat

Page 33

by Amy Shojai


  you aren’t feeding the cat. A smal bandage may be

  provided to keep it covered when not in use.

  Some cats won’t bother the tube at al . Others are

  intent on either cleaning it or trying to remove it.

  Monitor your cat, and if necessary, provide a col ar

  restraint that keeps her from doing damage to the

  tube or herself.

  SENILITY

  As they age, cats can develop signs of senility, or

  cognitive dysfunction syndrome (CDS). “CDS basical y

  represents a loss of memory and learning, or a reduction in

  learning memory,” says Benjamin Hart, DVM, a behaviorist

  at University of California-Davis. The syndrome has long

  been recognized in elderly dogs, and cats also are affected.

  “Cats age much more graceful y than dogs,” says Dr. Hart,

  and because they live much longer, the age when they

  develop symptoms is therefore much later.

  “You’re more likely to see it in 15-year-old and older cats,”

  says Gary Landsberg, DVM, a behaviorist in Thornhil ,

  Ontario. He authored one of the first research papers on cats

  that concluded, in part, that as many as 80 percent of cats he

  sees that are over the age of 16 show signs of senility.

  “Some of the brain changes in [these cats] are similar to

  those seen in the early stages of human Alzheimer’s,” he

  says. Like the affected humans, cats with cognitive

  dysfunction also have deposits of amyloid material in the

  brain.

  Senior Symptoms

  Signs of feline cognitive dysfunction can be vague and

  confusing, and mimic other disease conditions. Look for:

  Disorientation: wanders aimlessly, acts lost and

  confused, may not recognize family members or other

  familiar people or places, gets “stuck” in corners or lost

  in the house

  · Interaction changes: no longer greets family members,

  dislikes or avoids petting, not as interested in getting

  attention, interaction changes with other pets

  · Sleep changes: is awake and active at night, sleep

  cycles are disrupted or reversed

  · Housetraining is forgotten

  · Anxiety or compulsive behaviors: tremors, yowling and

  crying, repetitive pacing, floor or object licking

  In the past, these symptoms would have been

  brushed off as a normal part of feline aging, says Susan

  Little, DVM, a feline specialist in Ottawa, Canada. Today,

  there are treatments available that can help. “It actual y

  should be recognized as a specific health issue of a geriatric

  cat.” Affected cats typical y seem to forget how to do normal

  cat activities. For example, they are unable to find the litter

  box, or simply sit in the middle of the room and cry.

  Often, dog studies have been based on tests used to help

  diagnose human Alzheimer’s patients. Fewer studies have

  been conducted in cats, and these studies, in turn, often

  have been based on the canine studies, says Kel y Moffat,

  DVM, a general practitioner at Mesa Veterinary Hospital in

  Mesa, Arizona. She conducted one of the first studies in cats

  that included ful blood panel examinations and neurological

  workups.

  She examined 155 cats, aged eleven to twenty-one years

  old. She evaluated whether the cat’s relationship with the

  owner or other animals changed—perhaps a decrease in

  tolerance to being handled or being left alone, for example,

  or failure to recognize familiar people or places. “We asked

  if these cats were waking up the owner at night, or

  excessively vocalizing at night; if they’re wandering, pacing,

  or any type of repetitive or compulsive type behaviors; and

  we looked at anxiety, fear and irritations to see if cats

  seemed to be more irritable than when they were younger.”

  The last question covered memory and learning—if the cat

  stil used the litter box, for example. “We definitely had a lot

  of cats that didn’t have any medical conditions [to account

  for] showing signs,” she says, with cats older than fifteen

  vocalizing a much more at night.

  Melissa Bain, DVM, a lecturer at University of California-

  Davis also researched feline cognitive disorder. She began

  by conducting phone interviews to screen the owners of cats,

  aged eleven to nineteen that were patients at the UC-Davis

  Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital. Basic questions were

  asked to identify and eliminate cats from the study that had

  physical causes for suspect behavior changes. They ended

  up with 130 cats for the study. These were then further

  identified as being positive or negative for a behavior

  change due to potential cognitive dysfunction in these four

  categories:

  disorientation,

  interaction

  with

  owner,

  housetraining, sleep-awake cycle. “We asked them three to

  four questions in each category. For disorientation, we

  asked if the cat got lost in the house or the yard, or stuck in

  corners or behind furniture, for example.” Owners were

  asked to answer with increase, decrease, the same, or

  absent. They were also asked to compare the aged cat’s

  behavior to when they were middle-aged at seven to eight

  years old.

  “They were al spayed females and castrated males,” says

  Dr. Bain, “and the cat had to be positive for two or more

  signs in a category to be considered positive for that

  category. We haven’t done the statistics on it, but there

  doesn’t appear there’s any difference between the sexes.”

  She says many of the cats showed increased vocalizing for

  no reason. “We didn’t know what category to put it in. The cat

  would just meow and act confused. It seemed to happen at

  night.”

  The acronym D.I.S.H. (disorientation, interaction, sleep

  changes, housebreaking) was created to help identify

  cognitive disorders in dogs, and because the drug Anipryl

  was licensed for use in those specific categories, says Dr.

  Landsberg. However, the acronym doesn’t account for

  anxiety or compulsive behaviors such as howling and

  repetitive pacing that tend to be quite common in both older

  dogs and older cats. “Broader categories are probably a bit

  better. That’s what we were looking for in cats, because you

  don’t look at learning and memory tests in exactly the same

  way,” he says.

  Dr. Bain’s cat study indicated that 20 percent of eleven-to-

  twelve-year-old cats were positive for one or more

  categories. “We considered one category to be mild

  impairment,” says Dr. Bain. “Only 3 percent were positive for

  two or more categories—a very smal amount.”

  As the cat’s age increased, so did the prevalence. The

  percentage of thirteen-to-fourteen-year-olds positive for one

  or more categories was 33 percent, but only 8 percent were

  positive for more than two categories. 42 percent of the

  fifteen-to-sixteen-year-olds were positive for one or more

  categories; 16 percent of this group was
positive for two or

  more categories. 61 percent of the final group of cats aged

  seventeen-to-nineteen-year-old cats were positive for one or

  more categories. “43 percent were positive for two or more,”

  says Dr. Bain.

  Age-Defying Tips

  Researchers agree that mental stimulation drastical y

  improved the cognitive function of aging cats.

  Keep your cat both physical y active, and mental y

  engaged throughout her life to keep her brain young

  and potential y prevent or slow the progression of

  aging changes. Teach her to walk on a leash; teach

  her tricks; offer brain-stimulating viewing entertainment

  such as bird feeders outside windows.

  Offer puzzle toys that reward the cat’s interest by

  dispensing treats. This can mimic feline hunting

  behaviors and keep the cat entertained and mental y

  sharp.

  Treatment

  It’s vital that the condition be diagnosed correctly. A

  single behavior change in an old cat could potential y have

  several causes. For example, a break in housetraining might

  be due to arthritis that makes getting in and out of the litter

  box painful. It could also be caused by kidney disease or

  diabetes that prompts increased urination. Personality

  changes could be caused by a brain tumor, hyperthyroidism,

  or pain from dental disease. Wailing at night sometimes is a

  sign of high blood pressure.

  Without the proper screening tests to rule out other

  causes, it can be very difficult to definitively diagnose this

  condition. A large percentage of geriatric cats displaying

  these objectionable behaviors are simply put to sleep.

  Today, medical help can reverse the condition in a

  percentage of affected cats, and preserve the bond between

  the owners and their pets.

  Once properly diagnosed, the human medicine selegiline

  hydrochloride (Anipryl) has been FDA-approved in the

  United States to treat canine cognitive disorder. “Anipryl can

  be used in cats now in Canada,” says Dr. Little, and it has

  been used with success off-label in the United States. Dr.

  Fortney says the drug may work to prevent the ongoing

  damage to the brain. “It acts on one of the neurotransmitters

  in the brain responsible for nerve-to-nerve communication,

  and slows the natural destruction of the chemical compound

  dopamine in the brain.”

  Cognitive dysfunction is a progressive disease, and

  medication can slow or reverse these behavior changes but

  not on a permanent basis. “The medicine is not a magical

  elixir or fountain of youth,” says Nicholas Dodman, BVMS, a

  behaviorist at Tufts University. Time wil catch up with the cat,

  and there wil be an eventual decline. But selegiline can buy

  time and improve the cat’s quality of life for perhaps a year

  or more. And when your cat is 17 or 18 years old, another

  year or two is golden. General y the cat wil need to be on the

  drug for about four weeks before any results can be

  expected.

  Comfort Zone

  Cats suffering from senility often forget to use the litter box.

  Keeping the cat’s bedding and your carpet and upholstery

  clean and odor-free helps maintain quality of life for you both.

  Here are some of my favorites.

  Anti-Icky-Poo uses live bacteria to eliminate any

  organic material left behind by your pets.

  Urine-Off employs an enzyme that digests the urine

  molecules.

  Zero Odor is not an enzyme, but is composed of anti-

  odor molecules that bind with odor molecules and

  change them from smel y to non-offensive.

  AtmosKlear Odor Eliminator developed for the

  automotive industry can be used straight or mixed with

  other cleaning preparations. It's recommended for pet

  odors and other household odors (smoke, gym bags,

  basement mustiness, etc).

  New Frontiers

  A number of other studies of dogs using selegiline have

  shown promising results regarding increased longevity. The

  newest treatment, a therapeutic diet for canine cognitive

  disorder, was made available in 2002, but researchers say

  that work on a comparable feline diet has not made

  significant strides.

  “There are a couple of other drugs available in Europe,

  Canada and Australia,” says Bil Fortney, DVM, director of

  community practice at Kansas State University. One is

  cal ed Fitergol (nicergoline) made by Rhone Merieux in

  France. “They end up increasing the blood flow to the brain,

  and therefore delivering more oxygen to the brain so that the

  memory is supposed to work better. There are newer drugs

  on the horizon that perhaps can better treat this particular

  problem, or treat those that don’t seem to respond as wel to

  the Anipryl.”

  A wide range of various antioxidant, neuro-protective

  nutraceuticals, supplements, vitamins and diet can be

  adjusted to enhance the cognitive function in the older

  animal, says Dr. Lansberg. “But what’s proven to be

  effective or not is hard to say.

  Although many therapies may hold promise for the future,

  cat owners today can’t afford to wait years for them to

  become available. Dr. Moffat says environmental enrichment

  is easy, costs nothing and your cat can benefit today.

  Studies by Dr. Milgram in dogs proved that enrichment

  greatly improved canine cognition. “That’s definitely been

  proven in people, too,” says Dr. Moffat, and it applies just as

  wel to cats. “Use it or lose it, definitely. If they work the brain

  on a regular basis, the memory ability is preserved longer.”

  She suggests you offer your cat lots of play sessions to keep

  her mind as healthy and wel toned as her body. This can

  also help wear her out in a nice way, especial y prior to

  bedtime, to help curb unwanted nighttime activity and

  vocalizations.

  Comfort Zone

  A natural component of some foods, cal ed phospholipids,

  can help reverse some signs of cognitive disorders by

  helping brain cel s send and receive nerve impulses more

  effectively. Choline and phosphatidylcholine, two common

  message-sending compounds, are found in a dietary

  supplement cal ed Cholodin FEL, which is a less expensive

  alternative to Anipryl. The product is available through

  veterinarians, and comes in a pil form or powder flavored to

  appeal to cats, to be mixed into the food.

  Golden Moments: Love To The Max

  “I’ve had Max since he was six weeks old,” says

  Elizabeth Jones, a computer graphics specialist in Mesa,

  Arizona. She chose the white with gray Manx baby because

  he was so playful and affectionate. Throughout their lives

  together, Max never met a stranger he didn’t like. “He’d

  always come right up get in your lap, make himself

  comfortable, and just rub himself on your face,” she says.

  When Max was five years old, Elizabeth rescued a

  needy white Persian cat. Tenna and Max had the same


  golden eyes, and had been born within a month of each

  other. Although it wasn’t love at first sight, the personalities of

  the sweet, laid-back Tenna and the outgoing, brash Max

  seemed to complement each other. “The two of them

  became very close,” says Elizabeth.

  Max, Tenna and Elizabeth were a threesome for eight

  years, until the Persian became progressively il with cancer.

  “I had to put her to sleep,” she says. “That’s when a dramatic

  change happened with Max. When she left, he was just

  devastated.”

  Elizabeth couldn’t explain to Max what had happened to

  his furry companion. The cat was grief stricken, and his

  meow-wails went on for hours. Final y the 13-year-old Manx

  slipped away from the patio retreat and was gone for two

  days. “I knew he was looking for Tenna. And he wasn’t going

  to find her,” says Elizabeth.

  She was relieved when he came home, but he was

  stil crying and very upset. “I tried to comfort him—he was

  desperately unhappy. I was upset, too,” says Elizabeth, her

  voice shaking at the memory. With time, the pain eased for

  both of them, but Max was never the same.

  His behavior and personality began to change, so

  slowly that at first Elizabeth couldn’t quite put her finger on

  what was wrong. “He doesn’t look 15 years old to me, but I

  know he’s getting up there,” she says. He’d always been

  food motivated, but now even treats lost their al ure. Max

  began to lose weight, and became reluctant to interact. The

  gregarious cat she’d always known began to hide. Then last

  March when she graduated from school and began working,

  things went downhil fast.

  “He’d poop on my bed, or pee right in my spot where I

  sit on the couch,” says Elizabeth. The glazed look in his

  eyes, and his anxious behavior made Elizabeth fear that her

  beloved cat was losing his mind. Nothing she did seemed to

  help.

  Max either hid from her or wailed for attention.

  Without warning, he’d climb into bed in the middle of the

  night, cry to wake her, and make a mess. “I was at the end of

  my rope,” she says. “I had to deal with this ailing kitty that’s

  always been so friendly and wonderful, good company and

  very loving.” She knows not to take it personal y, but dealing

  with middle-of-the-night messes makes it hard. “It hurts so

  much to see him this way.”

 

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