Posted on 03/02/2006 5:14:54 AM PST by Graybeard58
Los Angeles, Calif. -- Veterinarians across the country are reacting to Mondays release of a UCLA study claiming that as many as 90 percent of all felines currently being born in the United States will develop Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) or Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) during their first month as a kitten.
Our research shows that an overwhelming majority of kittens begin displaying classic symptoms of ADD and ADHD within their first two to three weeks of life, symptoms such as uncontrollable, aggressive hyperactivity, constant squirming and being easily distracted by irrelevant sights, sounds and extraneous stimuli a ball of yarn or a toy mouse, for example, said UCLA researcher David Berman, who led the study. In the past these symptoms have simply been attributed to youth passed off as cute or playful, instead of being acknowledged as symptoms of a disorder. But we now know that when a kitten is bouncing hastily and randomly between playing with a loose string, chasing a remote controlled car, trying to give the goldfish a heart attack and tonguing herself clean, its actually a physical sign of the kittens neurotic psychological condition.
According to Berman, UCLA researchers achieved their results by studying a representative sample of 1,000 kittens from all parts of the country during the kittens first eight weeks of normal, indoors rearing. By documenting the habits of these felines, researchers were able to diagnose 904 of the adorable animals as having either the inattentive type ADD or the hyperactive/impulsive type ADHD.
The remaining ninety-six kittens were either stillborns or died shortly after birth, said Berman. So, technically, we could have drafted a report that said that all kittens, so long as theyre alive, have ADD but we all agreed that just sounded too damned depressing. By saying only ninety percent of kittens are suffering from these conditions, at least cat owners who havent read the fine print of the study can hope that their kittens are part of that ten percent which arent afflicted.
Berman said that in the past, most kittens displaying the symptoms of ADD or ADHD were routinely misdiagnosed most often by their owners but even by trained veterinarians or behavior specialists well-versed in animal psychology.
For the typical cat owner, when his or her kitten would display an ADD symptom such as being unable to focus long enough to listen to and act on instructions, he or she would often just shrug it off with a Shell grow out of it and simply hope that as a full-grown adult their kitten will begin to slow down, develop a longer attention span and stop its constant squirming, said Berman, referring to ADD and ADHD symptoms that were previously thought to be part of the normal behavior of a kitten.
Roger Vick, vice president of operations at the pharmaceutical manufacturer Novartis a company which was quick to voice strong support of the studys findings told sources Wednesday that Novartis will soon bring to market Kitilan, a specially formulated derivative of Ritilan made exclusively for kittens to help curb their symptoms.
Using our medication will provide these kittens with their one and only chance to live a normal life, said Vick. A kitten that is properly diagnosed and prescribed Kitilan will no longer be bouncing off the ceiling like they normally would. They will be able to control their attention span and they wont engage in physically dangerous activities without considering possible consequences like many ADD positive creatures do. Long story short, you wont have to worry about your kitten getting into all sorts of humorous situations that look like they belong on a photo calendar.
Most cats are democats - did you ever meet a creature with such an inborn sense of entitlement?
I'm convinced they are drugging normal boys into stupor. My sister has been giving my nephew ritilin for years. I had him with me for weeks at a time in the summer, no ritilin and based on my observations "he's just a normal active boy". I couldn't convince my sister. He reached high school and a teacher mentioned that he might have a vision problem. DUH! He does, one he was born with and it accounts for his reading issues. Since he had problems reading, he had problems in school, squirmed, etc. and they put him on ritilin.
As my son, now grown, an RN and a combat medic in the reserves says "I'm glad I didn't grown up now - they'd put me on drugs". He had trouble in grade school sticking to school projects (but put together a complete methodology of moving a population from one planet to another, including dozens of ship designs right down to the fuel they'd need and the fittings). A lot of boys in particular are very ill served by our school system.
Squirrels too. I started giving them cookies and now they are on my patio every morning for their hand out and will get quite indignant if I offer them a cracker.
In a few months that cat is going to be many times the size of the dog. My cat outweighed by chihuahua 4 to 1.
Cats do not have owners, they have staff.
I don't know about ADD, but every cat I've ever been owned by has had narcolepsy...
Kittens are playful!
PSssttt.. We should probably drug them.
BWA-HA-HA-HA-HA!!! For what it's worth, the 904 kittens are the normal ones, and the rest are suffering from lethargy. Who in their right mind would want a cat that acted like a dog?
LOL!
Well, this explains alot. My two kittens are complete scatterbrains.
I should have named them Gizmo and Widget.
My kitten has Attention Surplus Disorder
You just need to be more firm with them when dealing with ASD!
That might help - with maybe a glass of wine.
Lol.
I think my kitty needs Kitilan...
I love my cats, but I will be d*mned if I am going to test them for ADD.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.