Monday, 19 July 2010

Healthy bytes for your kitty

With good medical care, routine check-ups, good nutrition and lots of love your cat will live a long and happy life. Here are a few preventative health measures designed to keep your cat fit and healthy:

All sleep and no play makes Tom a dull boy

  • It is important to keep your cat fit by seeing that he gets regular exercise.

  • Simple toys such as ping-ping balls or a toy spider made of pipe-cleaners can keep your cat from destroying your home out of boredom, besides keeping away unwanted fat.

  • Be sure all the toys you give your cat are well made and safe. They should be intriguing enough to encourage play, but not a size or shape that could easily be swallowed.


(Joan Henderson is based in Australia and she has judged furry felines in many other countries including the USA, Bermuda, Malaysia, South Africa, Hong Kong, Philippines and New Zealand)

Declawing: Unnatural for your kitty

Declawing serves one purpose and one purpose only – it makes it convenient for someone who doesn’t understand cat behaviour or who doesn’t wish to learn how to live with a cat, to have a cat in their life.


Why are claws important?


Cats’ claws are important, as they are needed to help the kitty maintain his balance, mark his territory and defend himself. Yes, Kitty uses his claws to ‘scratch’ (sometimes this means your furniture). You may ask yourself, “Why does he use the furniture or the floor when a good scratching post is sitting unused in the corner?” There are several reasons:

  • Your scent is on the furniture. Kitty is placing his scent over yours. He is claiming you as his property, his territory. After all, it is your lap waiting for him at night, and your hand that feeds him. This scratching is actually honouring you. Kitty cannot understand why you are so upset with him. After all, every time he head-bumps you, he is also placing his scent on you. And you don’t get upset about that…do you?

  • Furniture is stable. It doesn’t wobble. Go over to the cat scratcher and knock it with your hand lightly. See it wobble? Stabilize it and the cat will use it.

  • Cats scratch also to stretch their backs, if the objects can’t handle their weight, they will find something that does.



What is declawing?


Declawing is the process when the vet surgically removes the toenail of the cat along with the last joint where the claw would grow. The removal can be done by a scalpel, or by a laser. It is major surgery and a painful procedure for the cat.

There is a newer procedure being used called a flexor tendonectomy. This surgery leaves the claws intact but cuts off the tendon that allows the cat to sheathe and unsheathe his claws. But again, this is still a painful procedure and should only be performed in the most extreme of circumstances. After this procedure, your cat’s claws will need to be routinely trimmed.

Why not to go for declawing?

Declawing should never be something done to save a stick of furniture, or to stop the shredding of drapes. Declawing a cat is unnatural for the cat and not without risks (that don’t often show up right away). There is nothing routine about the surgery, which is why following the surgery; most vets will not release the cat back to the worried owner for 24-48 hours. This is to spare the cat owner the agony of watching their cat bang his head against the cage in pain and confusion that follows the surgery.

In rare instances, declawing may need to be performed such as when the cat belongs to an elderly person with a bleeding disorder or paper-thin skin.

What problems can occur by declawing?

  • Infection can set in if the incision isn’t properly sealed.

  • The cat can turn aggressive if the right pain control measures weren’t used during and after surgery.

  • In some cases, the claws can grow back or the paws become infected.

  • After a declaw is performed, the paws will stay tender for about a week or two.

  • Litter box filler should be soft, shredded paper, rabbit food (rabbit pellets). Litter box accidents and using the floor or peeing on soft objects (like beds or clean clothes) often occur once a cat has been declawed.

  • Cats need their claws to defend themselves. Take this weapon away from them, and they will resort to biting.


What are the options to declawing?




  • There are vinyl nail covers for a cat’s claws. The casings fit over the nail then are sealed in place. The cat can scratch and leave no marks.

  • Use multiple scratching posts.

  • Use clicker training to train your cat to scratch in the right places.

  • Use cat condos.

  • Clip the nails yourself.

  • Use clear sheets of acrylic on the corners of our couches. These corners are covered with the extra fabric that comes with any sofa and are virtually unnoticeable. They work great to stop the cats from clawing.



How to take care of your declawed cat?


If you have your cat declawed, your cat should never be let outside, or dumped off in a shelter because of behaviour problems. If your cat does develop behaviour problems due to declawing, take responsibility for your actions and get him to a vet immediately.

The unfolding of our sweet felines

In the last issue, you read how domestic cats evolved with time. Here are the differences that set them apart from their wild counterparts.


Our cats had to adapt and change themselves in order to fully exploit their relationship with humans, and several key differences that set the domestic cat apart from his wild cousins include:


Communal living: While most cat species are solitary, domestic cats, like lions, are capable of sharing resources and forming bonds with each other. Female cats will even cooperate together to rear kittens, pooling litters into a group with the benefits of two mums to feed and protect them.

Fertility: Our pets display different breeding behaviour from their ancestors, which only have one or two breeding seasons a year; domestic cats can breed all year round and produce larger litters.

Appearance: Cats in a domestic setting no longer had a need for camouflaging coats and indeed the more unusual colours and patterns would have been more prized and tended to, giving them a better chance of passing on their genes. An increasing number of genetic mutations gave us solid colours, such as reds, torties, chocolates, colourpoints, bicolours, long coats, curly coats and a great many more.

Different on the inside: Not all of the differences are external, and domestic cats have evolved a significantly longer intestinal tract. This adaptation allows them to digest a greater range of foods and therefore take advantage of many things they come across in our kitchens. This means they find it easier to gain some energy from cereals, although it would take a few more great leaps of evolution before they would be happy tucking into a bowl of muesli!

I’ve been headshrunk!: It may be embarrassing for cats to admit, but domestication caused their brains to become smaller. It is difficult to say whether this is due to an all round downsizing, but it may be that with the safety of human protection there is less for the brain to do.

Neotony: This means that cats have retained kittenish behaviour into adulthood. This is partly because humans favoured cats who were more vocal, playful and affectionate, but also because cats extended the use of behaviours from their times living in groups as kittens to help them interact when living communally as adults. No self-respecting adult wild cat would be caught milk-treading!

Plus ça change: In spite of all these differences, domestic cats are still very close to their wild cousins and there are many things to remind us of this. Cats evolved in hot deserts and even shaggy-coated cats living for generations in cold climate still have adaptations to heat, such as ability to concentrate urine and drink comparatively little. Hunting instincts are hard-wired and an essential feline characteristic, even when they are redirected to toy mice. The preference for running water that sees many cats leaping up to the bathroom sink when their owner picks up the toothbrush harks back to a survival instinct to avoid unhealthy stagnant pools. Conveniently for us the instinct to bury faeces has not disappeared and draws our pets to the litter tray. Affectionate cheek rubbing is a behaviour wild cats use to mark territory. However, there are some wild behaviours we would rather our pets didn’t cling on to, such as territorial urine marking; some of the things we class as problem behaviour are just cats still acting out their wild sides.

Thanks to that unique symbiotic relationship with the human species the cat has evolved in a unique direction to become one of the most widespread and successful species on the entire planet. While many other cat species are endangered, domestic cats are extremely numerous and have conquered every continent even joining expeditions to the Antarctic. It reminds us of what amazing creatures we have the privilege of sharing our homes with.

(Anthony Nichols has been showing cats for about 20 years, starting with non-pedigrees, and breeding for about ten years. He has bred Devon Rex and Singapuras, but mainly focuses on breeding LaPerms in a range of colours, particularly the reds, creams, torties, chocolates and colourpoints.)




Did you know?

  • Miacids, weasel-like, primitive, prototype carnivores, gave rise to cats, dogs, raccoons and bears.

  • One common ancestor passed on a genetic anomaly to all living cats that prevents them from tasting sweetness.

  • There are distinctive differences between the different branches of the feline family tree: cats from the Americas have one less chromosome, only the big cats can roar and Cheetahs’ claws are uniquely non-retractable.

  • Archaeological evidence shows that 3000 years ago, a parallel domestication of cats occurred in the ancient cities of Pakistan’s Indus Valley. Centuries later, trade routes opened and the two groups of cats mixed.

  • Although it is often stated that killing a cat in ancient Egypt was punishable to death, they were also bred for ritual sacrifice.

  • Jungle cats (Felis Chaus) were also present in the Egyptian temples and could have interbred with other cats.

  • The ‘Founder Effect’: the first individual cats to arrive in a new place passed on traits to their offspring that became more common in the new populations than they were in the original populations. For example, poldactyly or extra digits, is disproportionately common in east coast America.

  • Cat colours or patterns are most common in the area of the world where the original mutation took place, for example, the highest density of colourpoints is found in Asia.

Hairballs who likes them?

Cats love to clean and groom themselves...but in the process they can develop harmful hairballs. Here’s more on how to prevent hairballs.


What are hairballs?


Trichobezoar or hairball is a common phenomenon of cats. Sometimes, a cat may produce noises, which sound like coughing, they will heave and lower their head and vomit a soggy mess. These are hairballs.

How do hairballs occur?

Cats clean themselves by licking. The tongue is equipped with rasps that capture loose fur that needs to come out. When the cat is young, he does not know how to spit loose fur from the rasps of the tongue, which then occurs due to swallowing actions. Thus hair is swallowed. Hair is indigestible, so what goes down must either pass along with the feces or come back up. Too much hair going down produces hair coming back up - hence hairballs.

How is it harmful?

If a cat is unable to rid himself of gross accumulations of hair by vomiting, the hair may block the intestines, a medical emergency which could result in death if not alleviated, usually by surgery.

Which cats are more prone?

Obviously long haired cats are more likely to form hairballs. Older cats loose the extreme raspage of their tongue, and thus pull less fur off and swallow it but they may be unable to adequately clean themselves.

How to treat hairballs?

The treatment for either hairballs, or an older cat who can no longer groom adequately is to help your cat with grooming. Teach your cat to love being groomed by you by talking softly to him, being careful not to pull the fur, and rewarding your cat after grooming.

How to groom kittens?

Young kittens must inspect everything, usually with their mouths. Like babies, they are easily distractable. Groom your kitten with two inexpensive plastic fine tooth combs. As soon as you start grooming, your kitten will sieze it for inspection and chew it in a few moments. Shift to the other comb and get some work done till the kitten is done inspecting the first comb. Then he will release that comb and seize the new thing, and chew on it. Recover the first comb and use it to groom till the distraction of the second comb chewing is done, and the kitten inspects the new thing (which is the first comb). In this fashion it is quite possible to get an entire combing job done.

Gradually the kitten will be less interested and stop worrying about the combs. When you have reached the stage at which he no longer impulsively bites the comb, you can shift to metal combs. By not reprimanding the kitten for biting the comb, you are teaching him that it is okay to relax and not to worry about being groomed.

What are the tools for grooming?

A good tool for grooming and teaching cats to like being groomed is a rubber brush. A fine tooth metal comb can be used to comb out mats if they are small and to comb out fleas. Scissors should be used to cut out mats that will not groom out easily. But here’s a word of caution: unless you have a very calm cat, have another person steady the cat while you use sharply pointed objects like scissors on him.

Another important specialized tool for eliminating undercoat is called by the brand name ‘Furminator’. It is a rake that really penetrates and takes off fur very well. This tool should be used on heavily shedding cats of any hair length, and any cat who gets hairballs. It is a good tool for all cats during shedding season.

Thus, proper grooming can help prevent hairballs in your kitties, thus making them clean and healthy.

(Kiturah Humphrey, featured columnist of Cats & Kittens, is a retire physician. From Siberian Gatos Cattery in the US, she is responsible for cattery policies and choices that include a programme to eliminate Corona Virus, HCM, Bartonella, Toxoplasmosis, etc.)

Ask the expert..July-Aug 10

Q: Please give inputs on different areas of kitten care.
– Vrushali Makarand Pandit, Pune

 

A: Dr KG Umesh: Cats are solitary animals and like to spend some time alone. Best time to bring home a kitten is when they are six weeks old or more. A small box with high sides placed in a warm, draft-free location is an ideal environment. The floor should be padded with washable towels or disposable papers. The first few days after your kitten comes home, continue to feed the food she’s used to have, to help prevent tummy upsets. Then you can gradually introduce a new food. Growing kittens have specific nutritional requirements, and the simplest way to fulfil them is to buy a good quality complete diet from a reputed manufacturer (for example, Whiskas dry or wet). Play is the key to kitten learning – and also provides exercise. It develops their physical and mental abilities, strengthen their muscles and increases their social skills. Make time to play so that she can continue to develop her ‘cat skills’ – like stalking and pouncing. Toys should be small and light enough to bat and carry around in her mouth – but not small enough to be swallowed. Short-haired kittens only need grooming once or twice a week, but long-haired breeds need at least 15 minutes every day. Until your kitten is used to being groomed, keep sessions short, and make her stand on a folded towel, to help her feel secure while you brush her. There are vaccinations (from age of nine weeks with two booster every three weeks) and deworming that will protect your kitten from a number of serious and highly infectious or parasitic diseases. Lastly, your kitten needs to learn the house rules–proper training, litter training and socialization (introduce to everyday sights, sounds people, etc). Consult your vet for further information and vaccinations schedule.

Take care of your kitty’s kidneys!

Older cats are more susceptible to kidney disease and hence should be regularly checked to avoid this dreadful disease.


Kidney disease can affect a feline at any age but is common among older cats. Kidney disease can either be Acute Renal Failure (ARF), a sudden onset, or Chronic Renal Failure (CRF), a progressive onset. CRF is more common in cats. There is no actual treatment for kidney disease but can only be controlled with proper treatment and diet. 

The symptoms…

Two of the common symptoms include increase thirst (polydipsia) and increased urination (polyuria). The other symptoms are loss of appetite, nausea and vomiting, weight loss, poor hair coat, depression, dehydration and emaciation. The cat may not exhibit all the symptoms. Kidney failure also leads to high blood pressure which may cause blindness in cats. 

The diagnosis…


If your cat shows any of these symptoms, rush your feline friend to the vet immediately. By the time CRF is diagnosed , the cat may have lost 70 percent kidney functioning. Diagnosis of the disease can be made by performing clinical tests like blood test and urinalysis. Blood tests will determine the levels of creatinine and BUN (blood urea nitrogen) as well as other components of the blood. The creatinine level will be elevated if the kidney is not functioning. 

Early detection can save her…

If your cat is aged five or older, it’s a good idea to check for CRF during each annual examination, with a blood test, urinalysis and blood pressure measurement. With early detection, proper diet, and hydration, cats may have a happy and a healthy life.

Chinchilla Persian: Kohl eyes that take your breath away!

"Chinchilla Persians are regal Persian cats with white or golden undercoats and minimal silver tipping. You just can’t ignore their beautiful emerald green eyes with black lining!"

The Chinchilla is a colour within the Persian breed. They are an elegant and regal, with a long beautiful luscious breed profile catsflowing coat, round face and large round eyes. The Chinchilla is depicted by the white undercoat with minimal silver tipping. Shaded Silver Persians have more silver tipping on the hair. The most remarkable thing about a Chinchilla/Silver Persian is their eyes, they have black lining around their eyes that make them look like they are wearing eye make-up. The emerald green eye colour is unbelievably beautiful against the coat. The rare Golden Chinchilla has pale honey/golden undercoat with a mantle of silver tipping.

Personality plus

They have a stunningly beautiful appearance and are outstandingly affectionate and gentle. This gorgeous breed is blessed with personality plus and has a great sense of humour. Chinchillas are generally placid, quiet cats who are more than happy to lie around the home being decorative. This breed will adapt to most situations and is a truly special breed that will completely captivate you and steal your heart. They are intelligent and will follow you from room to room, with the tones, his meows changing according to his moods and wants. Typically, they have a laid-back personality.

Happy & content

Persians are quiet cats, easygoing and generally get along with other pets and family members although boisterous children should be supervised with kittens. Strictly an indoor cat, this breed thrives of human companionship and it is recommended the Chinchilla be housed indoors, unless supervised or on a harness.

Grooming and genetics

This exceptionally pretty breed should be combed daily to avoid the coat knotting and matting. Special attention needs to be paid to the under arms, stomach and tail area, where the fur may run and knots occur more commonly. Some Chinchilla Persians may have runny eyes; this is easily kept clean by gently wiping clean with a wipe and warm water. This is due to their flat faces, some Persians may have problems during hot weather and are best kept indoor. If this is not possible perhaps get their coat clipped off for the hotter months, this makes a happy contented kitty. The long white coat does shed hair, which will become worse in spring as they are shedding the heavy winter coat.