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| Drug Class | Use Case | Veterinary Consideration | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Generalized anxiety, aggression | Takes 4-6 weeks to load. Paradoxical aggression possible in 10% of dogs. | | TCAs (Clomipramine) | Separation anxiety, OCD in dogs | Cannot be used with MAOIs; requires baseline liver enzyme testing. | | Trazodone | Situational anxiety (vet visits, fireworks) | Short-acting; risk of serotonin syndrome if combined with high doses of other serotonergics. | | Gabapentin | Chronic pain with anxiety | Excellent for feline veterinary visits; sedation is a desired effect for handling. |
For decades, the practice of veterinary medicine was primarily reactive. An animal was brought into a clinic; a physical examination was conducted; blood was drawn; a diagnosis was made. The animal’s internal state—its fears, its anxieties, its social drives—was often viewed as a confounding variable, a hurdle to a clean physical exam. Today, that paradigm has shifted dramatically. | Drug Class | Use Case | Veterinary
For veterinary professionals, integrating behavioral science means better diagnostic accuracy, safer practice, and more effective treatments. For pet owners, it means a deeper, more empathetic bond with their animal companions. | | Trazodone | Situational anxiety (vet visits,
The consequences of this divide were significant. For example, a cat presenting with "inappropriate urination" (peeing outside the litter box) was often treated symptomatically for a urinary tract infection (UTI). When the UTI was cured but the cat continued to urinate on the owner’s bed, the animal was labeled "spiteful" or "dominant." Without behavioral insight, the veterinarian missed the diagnosis: non-associative fear-based marking triggered by a stray cat visible through the bedroom window. An animal was brought into a clinic; a
The convergence of and veterinary science has given rise to a new era of “holistic veterinary medicine”—one where emotional well-being is considered as critical as renal function or joint health. This article explores the symbiotic relationship between these two disciplines, revealing how understanding the "why" behind an animal's actions is revolutionizing diagnosis, treatment, and the human-animal bond. Part I: The Historical Divide (And Why It Failed) Historically, animal behavior was the domain of ethologists (scientists studying animals in their natural habitats) and trainers. Veterinary science was the domain of pathologists and surgeons. The two rarely intersected.