For decades, veterinary medicine and animal behavior were treated as two distinct silos. If a dog had a limp, you saw a vet; if a dog bit the mailman, you saw a trainer. Today, that wall has crumbled. The integration of has revolutionized how we care for domestic animals, livestock, and wildlife alike, recognizing that physical health and psychological well-being are inseparable. The Biological Basis of Behavior
| Medical Condition | Common Behavioral Presentation | Misdiagnosis Risk | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Aggression when handled, nocturia (waking at night), reduced social interaction | "Old dog syndrome" or "senile aggression" | | Hyperthyroidism (Feline) | Increased vocalization, restlessness, spraying, aggression | Separation anxiety or cognitive dysfunction | | Cerebral Hypoplasia | Lack of fear, head pressing, circling, loss of learned habits | Idiopathic anxiety or senility | | GI Dysbiosis / IBD | Pica (eating litter/grass), post-prandial aggression, "midnight zoomies" | Compulsive disorder or attention seeking | | Hypothyroidism (Canine) | Lethargy, fearfulness, aggression (rarely – "rage syndrome" link debunked) | Idiopathic fear aggression | hombre negro tiene sexo con una yegua zoofilia
Oxford University Press (Publishers of core behavioral texts). For decades, veterinary medicine and animal behavior were