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What to do when a cat hides in a corner at home
This is a normal phenomenon, and the reasons are as follows. First, cats are timid, and the home is a new environment for them. In a new environment, cats will act scared, causing them to hide. Second, pay attention to your cat's stress response in the first few days at home. Do not change their food, bathe them, or vaccinate them immediately. Wait until the cat adapts to the new environment before performing these operations. Third, if the cat is not experiencing its first homecoming, it may be due to the cat returning to a new environment.
What to do when a cat is scared at home
A cat's fear at home is natural. The owner can prepare a cardboard box for the cat to hide in. When a cat arrives at a new environment, it will be highly alert and need to reevaluate whether the environment is safe. This may result in hiding and refusing to eat. The owner should not interfere too much during this time and let the cat slowly adapt to the environment. Seek medical attention if vomiting or diarrhea occurs.
Cat stress response symptoms
Alert phase: The body undergoes a series of neurophysiological changes, emergency mobilization of internal resources, and preparation for battle. This phase can be divided into the shock phase and anti-shock phase. In the shock phase, symptoms such as lowered blood pressure, increased vascular permeability, decreased blood concentration, and decreased body temperature may occur. The manifestations of the anti-shock phase are opposite to those of the shock phase. Resistance phase: Continuous neurophysiological changes occur, making full use of internal resources to deal with various emergencies. Exhaustion phase: The body's hormones and essential trace elements are depleted, causing cell and tissue damage, and post-traumatic stress disorder. This phase occurs only when the stress factor is severe or persistent. If it continues to develop, it will lead to death.
Precautions
First, eliminate the cause of stress, such as a cat receiving a vaccine at a hospital, a cat moving to a new home, or strangers visiting the house, which may cause the cat to feel anxious and scared. During this time, the cat's most familiar person can comfort it more, preferably hold it or put it in its own cage. Cover the cage with a towel to block the cat's view of the outside environment, allowing it to stay in a familiar surroundings. Once the cat's mood has stabilized, offer it a small treat.