Abnormal and Repetitive Behaviours Flashcards

1
Q

Are the majority of behaviours complained about abnormal?

A

No - normal for the species but unacceptable to owners eg. urine spraying, aggression
BUT abnormal can occur - behaviours not part of the normal repertoire and have no adaptive value

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2
Q

What is a stereotypy? What are these similar to?

A

No obvious aim or function eg. horses weaving, zoo/farm animals repetitive locomotor behaviours
-“repetitive invariant behaviour patterns with no obvious goal or function
-often related to suboptimal husbandry
Similar to Compulsive disorder (=OCD in humans but avoiding issue of conscious obsession)

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3
Q

What is the accepted term for stereotypies/compulsive disorders? Who proposed this?

A

Garner 2006 - Abnormal Repetitive Behaviour (ARB)

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4
Q

Give some figures for prevalence of ARBs in cat and dog population with reference

A

Ontario Veterinary College Luescher 1998
3.5% dogs
6% cats

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5
Q

Give examples of ABNORMAL behaviours

A
May be locomotor or oral 
Circling 
Tail chasing 
Pacing
Pouncing
Chasing light points 
Staring at shadows 
Startle response suddenly 
Chewing feet 
Excessive licking 
FLy-snapping (often hallucinatory)
Air or noise licking 
Flank sucking 
Hyperaesthesia
Pica
Polydipsia/phagia
Sidden aggression at self or object 
Rhythmical vocalistion
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6
Q

In which breed is flank sucking predisposed?

A

Doberman

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7
Q

What are Staffordshire bull terriers predisposed to do?

A

Spinning

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8
Q

In which breeds is tail chasing predisposed?

A

GSD and australian cattle dogs

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9
Q

What are miniature shnauzers predisposed to do?

A

Check their hind end

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10
Q

What are border collies predisposed to?

A
Shadow chasing/light staring 
Running circular tracks 
Fly snapping (partial seizures in the visual cortex)
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11
Q

Can repetitive behaviours be down to seizures?

A

Maybe initially, but not continuously

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12
Q

What is the function os a stereotypy or ARB?

A

Lowering arousal
Coping mechanism - kennelled dogs showing stereotypies actually have lower levels of stress physiologically
- at start often only seen in high stress situations, gradually threshold lowers until become commonplace

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13
Q

What may occur if no behavioural solution is found by the animals to control the stress response?

A

Prolonged physiological stress -> changes in physiology and immunology -> FIC/IBS

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14
Q

How do these behaviours develop?

A

Start for a range of reasons
Reinforced as a strategy within a particular context
Occour in response to predictive cues
Then generalisation

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15
Q

What are possible causes or origin behaviours?

A

Developmental - behaviours occurring during brain development
Frustration - not being able to perform behaviours motivated to perform
Prolonged, inescapable or extreme stress
Situations of emotional conflict (Displacement behaviour)
Medical reason eg. licking wound
Reinforced externally

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16
Q

Why may abnormal repetitive behaviours cause problems with life?

A

May be performed at the detriment of other behaviours like eating

17
Q

What is emancipation in the context of ARBs?

A

Behaviour is eventually performed whenever the animal is aroused -> situation you see behaviour performed in is NOT necessarily what caused the development of the behaviour
“Behaviour is emancipated from causal factors”

18
Q

How should ARB cases be treated?

A

Identify trigger factors - remove/reduce and then DS/CC animal to these factors
Remove external reinforcement of behaviour
Treat inflammatory / pain réponses caused by behaviour
Reduce stress generally - training, hide places
Potentially drug therapy

19
Q

What is the most common ARB in cats ?

A

Over grooming

  • pyschogenic alopecia
  • over-grooming syndrome
  • atypical neurodermatitus/hyperaesthesia
20
Q

What are the symptoms of over grooming in cats?

A
Excessive grooming/plucking/chewing - flanks and front 
FOcal or generalised alopecia 
Broken hair-shafts 
Mainly caudal body 
Regurgitation of hair 
GIT disturbances
21
Q

How do compulsive chewing disorders manifest differently in cats and dogs

A

Cats will not chew paws

Dogs will

22
Q

How does over grooming develop?

A

medical problems eg. FAD or dietary allergy
Reinforced by owner
Displacement activity - often after conflict or near a stressful event

23
Q

What is pica?

A

Ingestion of non-food material

24
Q

What condition may appear to be similar to pica but has different origin?

A

Ripping up materials but not eating them

25
Q

What are common materials for pica?

A

Wool (esp prevalent in burmese and siamese)
Cotton
Plastic/wood (non-orientals)

26
Q

Why may pica occur?

A

Misidentification of food i.e. thinks its a mouse
Medical differentials - Liver disease -> polyphagia
Cognitive dysfunction
Dental/oral pain
Gastric foreign body

27
Q

What are the breed predispositions associated with pica?

A

Especially seen in siamese and burmese

28
Q

When does pica often begin?

A

Stressful event eg. house move, breeder to new owner, sexual maturity ~1yr

29
Q

How can medical pica potentially be differentiated?

A

Give shredded wool with food to rule out actual need to digest the wool