SUSTAINABLE ACTIONS: MAGIC PIRATES ISLAND

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Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences & Center for Animal Welfare, [University Name] Abstract Background: Veterinary visits are a known stressor for dogs. While behavioral signs of fear (e.g., tucked tails, lip licking, avoidance) are well-documented, their physiological consequences on lower urinary tract health remain underexplored. This study investigates whether stress-induced voiding behaviors in waiting rooms correlate with subclinical urinary biomarkers.

Stress-induced voiding—often dismissed as "excitement urination"—may serve as a sentinel marker for transient urinary tract dysregulation. Veterinary teams should interpret waiting-room elimination as a clinical behavior, not a training failure. We propose a Stress-Voiding Index (SVI) to guide triage and low-stress handling protocols. Zooskool- Www.rarevideofree.com - 79

Dogs with high stress scores (≥7/10) were 4.2× more likely to exhibit transient glucosuria and alkaline pH (≥7.5) compared to low-stress dogs (p < 0.01). Furthermore, 68% of high-stress dogs voided within 10 minutes of entering the exam room; their post-void UCCR was significantly elevated (mean 55 × 10⁻⁶ vs. 22 × 10⁻⁶ in controls, p = 0.003). These changes normalized within 60 minutes post-exam. Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences & Center for

The Canine Stress-Voiding Cycle: How Behavioral Indicators of Distress in Waiting Rooms Predict Subclinical Urinary Abnormalities in Domestic Dogs ( Canis familiaris ) Dogs with high stress scores (≥7/10) were 4

[Your Name], DVM, PhD Candidate; [Co-author], CAAB (Certified Applied Animal Behaviorist)

Fear-free practice, urinary cortisol, subclinical cystitis, waiting room welfare, canine stress ethogram 1. Introduction Veterinary medicine has historically separated “behavior problems” (e.g., fear urination) from “medical problems” (e.g., idiopathic cystitis). Yet, the neuroendocrine stress axis (HPA axis) directly affects the bladder via sympathetic activation and detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia. In cats, stress is a known trigger for feline interstitial cystitis (FIC), but in dogs, stress-induced urinary changes are rarely quantified.

We conducted a prospective observational study of 120 client-owned dogs presenting for annual wellness exams. Behavior was scored every 2 minutes using a modified Stress Ethogram (0–10 scale). Urine samples were collected via free-catch midstream and analyzed for pH, specific gravity, glucose, and the stress biomarker urinary cortisol-to-creatinine ratio (UCCR) .