Department of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Université de Montréal, Saint-Hyacinthe, QC, J2S 2M2, Canada.
BMC Vet Res. 2020 Apr 10;16(1):100. doi: 10.1186/s12917-020-02302-w.
Specific behaviors associated with pain in cats with oral disease have not been consistently studied. The aim of this exploratory study was to identify pain-induced behaviors in cats before and after treatment of oral disease using video assessment. Twenty-four cats (6 ± 3.3 years old; 4.9 ± 1.7 kg) were included in a prospective, blinded, randomized clinical trial. Cats were equally divided into minimal (G1: minimal dental treatment) or severe (G2: multiple dental extractions) oral disease groups. After acclimation at day 0, they underwent oral examination, radiographs, scaling, and dental extractions under general anesthesia (anesthetic protocol: acepromazine, hydromorphone, propofol, isoflurane, meloxicam, and local anesthetic blocks; day 1), and were discharged at day 6. Cats were filmed remotely for 10 min using a wide-angle glass lens camera before surgery (baseline) and throughout the study at different time points (36 h of video recording). The videos consisted of four parts namely general, playing, feeding and post-feeding behaviors. A board-certified behaviorist evaluated the duration/frequency of different behaviors based on an ethogram, which were analyzed using linear mixed models and a generalized linear model, respectively (p < 0.05).
In comparison with baseline, duration of "not pawing the face" was significantly shorter at day 3 in G2. These cats spent significantly longer time "standing" and "laying" at days 3 and 6, respectively; G1 spent significantly less time "walking" and "standing" at days 3 and 4, respectively and significantly longer time "immobile" at day 3. Duration of "no/slow tail movement" was significantly longer in G2 than G1 at day 5. Duration of "pawing the ribbon" (playing) was significantly shorter in G2 than G1 at day 1. Feeding and post-feeding behaviors with soft food were not significantly different between groups or over time. Frequency of "difficulty grasping dry food" was significantly higher in G2 than G1 up to day 6. Frequency of post-feeding "head shaking" was significantly higher in both groups at day 6 when compared with baseline.
This study identified pain-induced behaviors in cats undergoing treatment of oral disease. These behaviors may be used to differentiate painful versus pain-free cats in clinical practice.
与口腔疾病猫相关的特定行为尚未得到一致研究。本探索性研究的目的是使用视频评估在口腔疾病治疗前后识别猫的疼痛行为。24 只猫(6±3.3 岁;4.9±1.7kg)被纳入一项前瞻性、盲法、随机临床试验。猫被平均分为轻度(G1:轻度牙科治疗)或重度(G2:多次拔牙)口腔疾病组。在适应期(第 0 天)后,它们接受了口腔检查、放射线照相、刮除和全身麻醉下的拔牙(麻醉方案:乙酰丙嗪、氢吗啡酮、异丙酚、异氟烷、美洛昔康和局部麻醉阻滞;第 1 天),并在第 6 天出院。在手术前(基线)和整个研究期间,使用广角玻璃镜头相机远程拍摄猫的视频 10 分钟,拍摄时间不同(视频记录 36 小时)。视频包括四个部分,即一般行为、玩耍行为、进食行为和进食后行为。一名董事会认证的行为学家根据行为表评估不同行为的持续时间/频率,并分别使用线性混合模型和广义线性模型进行分析(p<0.05)。
与基线相比,G2 组在第 3 天“不 paw 脸”的持续时间明显缩短。这些猫在第 3 天和第 6 天分别“站立”和“躺着”的时间更长;G1 在第 3 天和第 4 天分别“行走”和“站立”的时间更短,而第 3 天“不动”的时间更长。G2 组在第 5 天比 G1 组“尾巴无/缓慢移动”的持续时间更长。G2 组在第 1 天“玩丝带”(玩耍)的持续时间比 G1 组更短。在各组和各时间点,软食的进食和进食后行为均无显著差异。G2 组“难以抓干食”的频率在第 6 天比 G1 组更高。与基线相比,两组在第 6 天“进食后摇头”的频率均更高。
本研究确定了口腔疾病猫在接受口腔疾病治疗时的疼痛行为。这些行为可能用于临床实践中区分疼痛猫和无痛猫。