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Can catnip cause urinating?

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Steve84 - 25 Oct 2005 05:38 GMT
I have 2 cats.  They are brother and sister and about 15 1/2 years old.  
The male has been diabetic for about  8 years and other then being fat
is doing pretty good.  I give him two shots a day.

The female has shown very early signs of kidney disease but nothing bad
yet.  Here is the problem.  About a year ago for the first time in her
life she urinated on the carpet in the family room.  I had her checked
out and she had a urinary tract infection.  I gave her meds and it
cleared up.  A few months later she urinated on the carpet a few more
times.  I had her checked out and she was fine.  A month or so ago it
started happening frequently.  I had the vet check her out and I even
shelled out $275 for an ultra sound.  The blood tests all came back fine
and the ultra sound looked ok too.  Its been about 3 weeks since she was
at the vet and she hasn't had an accident since then.

There have been no stressful changes in her life.  She has lived in same
house with her brother for 8 years.  I keep the litter box clean at all
times and added a second litter box too.  I have been racking my brain
trying to think of anything that might be causing her to go outside the
litter box.  She always uses the litter box to move her bowels.  She
only has "accidents" urinating

A year or two ago somebody gave me two soft pads that the cats could lay
on.  Those mats had catnip in them and Betty my female at kept urinating
on them and I eventually took them off the floor so they couldn't use
them anymore.  I have always left a few toys on the floor in the family
room that are soft and when they were bought had catnip in them.  I have
had those toys literally for years but my male cat Barney likes using
them as a pillow so I never threw them away.

I started wondering if there was a link between Bettys urinating on the
carpet and the catnip smell in the toys even though the catnip shouldn't
even exist anymore after all these years.  I decided to pick up all the
toys and left nothing on the carpet in that room.  She has not urinated
on the carpet in the three weeks since I picked up those very old toys.

The bottom line is has anybody every heard of catnip in anyway causing
cats to urinate where they usually do not?  I hope this all makes sense

Thanks

Steve

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jils - 25 Oct 2005 07:55 GMT
might it be the smell of the previous "accident" rather than the catnip?
cats are attracted to their own urine, once the smell is there, they'll
keep using that spot.
did the vet not offer any further advice? seems a bit OTC to run
expensive tests and not offer any psychological advice.

> I have 2 cats.  They are brother and sister and about 15 1/2 years old.  
> The male has been diabetic for about  8 years and other then being fat
[quoted text clipped - 37 lines]
>
> Steve
Steve84 - 25 Oct 2005 16:03 GMT
The vet is stumped.  We all agree it might be psychologicalin some way
but have no idea what might be the problem.  The only other solution the
vet offered was to give the cat anti anxiety pills everyday which is not
going to happen..  No way I can give that cat pills.  She would really
stress out if I did

> might it be the smell of the previous "accident" rather than the catnip?
> cats are attracted to their own urine, once the smell is there,
[quoted text clipped - 46 lines]
>>
>> Steve

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jils - 25 Oct 2005 21:15 GMT
how effectively have you cleaned the spots where she's peed?
carpet can really hold smells. have it professionally cleaned, then
provide litter trays around the house til she gets the hang of them again.

> The vet is stumped.  We all agree it might be psychologicalin some way
> but have no idea what might be the problem.  The only other solution the
[quoted text clipped - 52 lines]
>>>
>>> Steve
Judy - 26 Oct 2005 04:12 GMT
Have you considered getting a second opinion?

Actually, seeing as your vet is stumped, I'm surprised that he/she hasn't
referred you to someone else who may know more.

> The vet is stumped.  We all agree it might be psychologicalin some way but
> have no idea what might be the problem.  The only other solution the vet
[quoted text clipped - 49 lines]
>>>
>>> Steve
No More  Retail - 26 Oct 2005 04:31 GMT
Sounds like a typical vet just like a doctor they want to keep it in house
or won't admit if they don't know.   That is why I love mine so much
Steve84 - 27 Oct 2005 05:11 GMT
Actually the person who did the ultra sound drove in from Michigan State
University which has a very good vet school to do it and she didnt know
what to do either

No More Retail wrote:

>Sounds like a typical vet just like a doctor they want to keep it in house
>or won't admit if they don't know.   That is why I love mine so much
>
>  

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