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What lies in this book is perhaps more important as a whole rather than in its details. If you have only an hour to spend on it, it makes much more sense to read the whole book roughly in that hour than to read only the first two chapters in detail. For this reason, I have arranged each chapter in such a way that you can read the whole chapter in a couple minutes, simply by reading the headlines which are in italics. If you read the beginning and end of every chapter, and the italic headlines that lie between them, turning the pages almost as fast as you can, you will be able to get the overall structure of the book in less than an hour.
Then, if you want to go into detail, you will know where to go, but always in the context of the whole.
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The rule in progressive veterinary clinics is now: Thorough medical workup before behavioral diagnosis.
: Identifying if a behavior (like aggression or house-soiling) is caused by pain, neurological issues, or metabolic disease. Psychopharmacology
Tail chasing, flank sucking, and excessive licking often appear behavioral, but they can stem from neurological conditions like epilepsy, brain tumors, or congenital malformations. Veterinary neurologists use MRIs and EEGs to peer into the brain, while behaviorists map the patterns of these repetitive actions. Only by combining both fields can a clinician distinguish between a primary compulsive disorder (treated with SSRIs and behavior modification) and a structural brain issue (treated surgically).
Integrating into veterinary science transforms how clinicians approach a case. Instead of punishing the symptom, they investigate the cause.
One of the most critical contributions of ethology (the study of animal behavior) to veterinary science is the recognition of pain markers. Animals are evolutionarily hardwired to hide pain. In the wild, a sick or injured animal is a target for predators. Consequently, domestic animals often do not cry out or limp until a condition is advanced.
And Dr. Mira Patel, watching from the helicopter, realized she had just witnessed something that no textbook on animal behavior or veterinary science had ever described: a wild society that had invented palliative care, and then—when the patient healed—forgotten it entirely, as if it had never been necessary at all.