“You get creative.”
Hide and Seek
Veterinary researchers have devised an ingenious solution to head off feline resistance to brain scans: hiding the electrodes underneath custom-fit crocheted caps.
In a press release about this fascinating and adorable discovery, the University of Montreal boasted that its scientists figured out the system that helps keep the brain scanners on cats who are given chronic pain tests.
When administered while felines are awake, brain scans meant to detect pain conditions like osteoarthritis are often annoying to the cats in question. The animals often end up chewing on wires and trying to shake off the sensitive electrodes of the electroencephalogram (EEGs).
Vets generally sedate cats when giving them EEGs to avoid such a scene, but in their new study published in the Journal of Neuroscience Methods, the UdeM researchers are proposing their novel knitted approach.
In interviews with the New Scientist about their methodology, the researchers said that they came up with the solution after becoming frustrated with cats they were doing brain scans on constantly throwing off their electrodes.
“When you spend more time putting electrodes back on than you do actually recording the EEGs, you get creative,” explained PhD student and study coauthor Aliénor Delsart.
Getting Creative
When trying to find solutions to this feline conundrum, the researchers stumbled upon a YouTube tutorial for crocheted cat hats. The team leads had a grad student make the cats’ beanies and were pleased to discover that it helped keep the electrodes in place — though there’s little doubt that the cats were none too pleased by their new accessories.
With the crocheted beanies secured as a novel solution to the pissed-off cat problem, UdeM team lead Éric Troncy said in the press release that they’re looking for government funding to expand their research into chronic feline pain.
“We now plan to obtain [Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Alliance] funding, in partnership with private companies, to enable us to establish a genuine EEG signature for chronic pain,” Troncy said, “and many other applications that will enable us to automate chronic pain detection in the future.”
Necessity is, as they say, the mother of invention — and in this case, it may end up helping all of felinekind.
More on cats: Research Finds That Cats Feel Grief When Their Fellow Pets Die… Even Dogs
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