By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Most pet owners put away the paper towels and the
disinfectant when their pet is housebroken, but some must
keep them handy because their trained dog continues to have
accidents in the house. Dr.
John Harkness, animal behaviorist at Mississippi State
University's College of Veterinary Medicine, said many dogs
urinate inappropriately from submissiveness or excitement.
Other causes include fear, separation anxiety, territorial
marking and medical problems. "Submissive
urination occurs in dogs of any age, but more often in
puppies and young females," Harkness said. "It often occurs
in dogs that are repeatedly punished or corrected and which
are kept dependent on humans." Harkness
attributed the behavior to the social relationship between
humans and the dog. Dogs urinate in response to dominant or
threatening signals given by the people to whom the dog is
submissive. Among
the signals dogs submit to are direct eye contact,
threatening or angry facial expressions, reaching over the
dog, scolding or punishment, and loud, excited or
higher-pitched voices. Not all dogs wet in these situations.
Some submit by rolling over, cowering, laying back their
ears, tucking their tail between their legs, hanging their
head or exposing their groin. "These
are behaviors intended to signal back to the dominant person
that the submissive dog poses no threat and wishes to avoid
conflict," Harkness said. "Generally, the longer submissive
urination persists, the more difficult it becomes to
stop." Most
puppies outgrow or overcome this unwelcome behavior if their
owners stop greeting them and interacting with them as they
have in the past. Reduce or eliminate all signals that
initiate the wetting, and encourage visitors to do the
same. "When
you get home, greet the dog quietly with no eye contact,
over-reaching or loud words," Harkness said. "Kneel and
speak softly, patting the dog's chest, not head. Avoid
scolding." Harkness
said when the dog responds correctly, give it encouragement
or food treats. When the dog acts overly submissive, ignore
it, but don't punish it. "Interact
gently with the dog when you know its bladder is empty, such
as after a walk. Never interact with the dog when it is
submissive," he said. Mild
anti-anxiety or anti-depressant drugs may help, but not
common tranquilizers. Some owners put diapers on their dogs
to deal with the problem. Sometimes
dogs wet out of excitement rather than submission. Young,
active dogs with incomplete bladder control exhibit this
problem most often. It can be triggered by such things as
greetings, active play, loud speech and clapping. "Dogs
usually outgrow this behavior, but owners and others near
the dog should stop doing what excites the dog," Harkness
said. "Remain quiet, move slowly, ignore the dog, and reward
sitting and quiet behaviors." Exercise
and walk active dogs with urination problems often, allowing
them to use the bathroom outdoors. Anti-anxiety drugs and
those that increase urinary tract control may be useful as
prescribed by a veterinarian. Released:
Feb. 4, 2002
Animal
Health
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More than
cleanup needed to
solve wetting problems
For more information, contact: Dr. John Harkness, (662)
325-0994
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:39
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm02/020204bw.html
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