TheCatSite.com › Forums › Our Feline Companions › Behavior › How to Ease Surgeried Cats Back Into Household
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

How to Ease Surgeried Cats Back Into Household

post #1 of 5
Thread Starter 
I know that when cats return from the vet after surgery, the remaining cats in the household don't recognize the returning ones because of scent. I will quarantine the returning cats for a while in their own room, but wondered what suggestions anyone had to speed up the process?

I searched the boards and found rub all cats with corn starch baby powder and also vanilla extract. Any other ideas? What about Feliway spray?
post #2 of 5
Those are all good tips. I would recommend reading our article on introducing cats to see if it helps also. http://www.thecatsite.com/Behavior/4...cing-Cats.html
post #3 of 5
Thread Starter 
After about 12 hours keeping my patients in isolation, I tried the "vanilla extract trick" on everyone's noses and tail bases. After I got done, we all smelled like vanilla. I released the infirmed, one or two growls and that was it. In the past, I've had the non-recognition/aggression go on for several days. Always something to learn..
post #4 of 5
That is great news. How are the cats doing after their surgery?
post #5 of 5
Thread Starter 
It was just their neuterings. They were up and around in several hours after being home and started getting rammy in the back bedroom pretty quickly. I released them around midnight all "vanilla-ed" and everybody got back to normal in short order. Today, the day after, it's as if nothing every happened.

I had a previous experience where one cat continued attacking a surgeried cat for days after. That was a more complicated surgery, maybe he had more smell to disperse - or maybe it was the vanilla.
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Behavior
TheCatSite.com › Forums › Our Feline Companions › Behavior › How to Ease Surgeried Cats Back Into Household