Video of Ireland AM vet on TV3: all about cat fights and bites

This week, I discussed the common issue of cats fighting on Ireland AM. You can watch the video by clicking here. I brought a cat called Benny along with me – I treated him last week for a bite on his tail, which is pictured above. At the time, it was very painful and infected: as you’ll see in the video clip, he’s back to normal now.

Cats are territorial creatures, often using physical fights to resolve disputes. Cat bites can  seem like insignificant injuries at first. The teeth are very sharp, and they make tiny puncture wounds, a few millimetres in diameter. However, the mouth of a cat contains thousands of disease-causing bacteria, and these are carried into the wound by the teeth. Within a few hours, the bacteria multiply rapidly, and the bite wound often becomes swollen, red and painful. Bites can happen anywhere on the body – the rear end (like the tail, in Benny’s case) is common in cats that are running away from aggressors, and the front end – head, forelegs – is common in cats that are either aggressors themselves or cats that are standing up to aggressors. A cat bite is the most common cause of lameness in cats
and whenever a vet sees a lame cat, we’ll always feel carefully up and down the affected leg, looking for swellings, scabs or other signs of cat bites.
Treatment is nearly always simple wound hygiene, antibiotics and pain relief. Most cases do really well with treatment.
There is another possible danger: cats pass on a dangerous virus to each other via bites – Feline Immunodeficiency Virus – the equivalent of HIV in humans. It’s no risk at all to humans, but it can cause CatAIDS. For this reason, owners should do their best to prevent their cats from being bitten by other cats.
Male hormones are the cause of most fighting behaviour in the cat world. If a male cat is castrated, the incidence of fight wounds reduces by over eighty per cent. Neutered cats are much less likely to get involved in fights, but they still respond if they are challenged by aggressive interlopers like visiting tom cats.
Situations like this can be difficult to resolve. If a cat has repeated fight injuries, owners should first of all try to contact the owner of any other cats that they have seen causing a problem, suggesting that they are neutered. They may need to consider using a cat trap to catch marauding feral cats, and then organise for them to be neutered. If that was done, there would definitely be fewer cat fights in the area.

Tips

  • Cat bites are the most common cause of lameness in cats
  • Cats can be bitten anywhere by other cats
  • Antibiotics and pain relief are usually needed

Preventing cat bites

  • Male cats are more likely to fight
  • Neutering reduces fighting behaviour by 80%
  • Aggressive feral male cats should be trapped and neutered

Risks of cat bites

  • Wounds and abscesses
  • Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV)

About Pete Wedderburn

PETE WEDDERBURN BVM&S CertVR MRCVS qualified as a veterinarian from Edinburgh, Scotland in 1985. His mission in life is to communicate high quality information to pet owners, in any way that this can be done.
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