Urine soiling is compounded in pets when they use urine to mark their territory. Their exquisite sense
of smell tempts them back to the same spot. Although we may not be able to see or smell the urine
mark, our pets can and will return to that location to re-apply their own scent
Anti-Icky-Poo comes in a quart bottle with spray nozzle. Composed of backeria and enzymes, this
product attacks and removes odors caused by urine, feces, vomit, skunk odor, and more. After you
remove excess urine with paper towels or clean rags, saturate soiled area with Anti-Icky-Poo. The
spray must come in contact with all urine-soiled areas to remove odor. Remove residue using wet cloth
or paper towels. Comes with detailed instructions about its use.
Anti-Icky-Poo and Stink-Finder/Stink-Free Black Light
We have difficulty smelling or seeing many urine-soiled areas within our homes which need to be
cleaned to reduce our pet's inclination to re-apply urine in this area. Darken the room and turn
on the Stink-Free Stink-Finder black ultraviolet light as you examine areas frequented by your
pet. Urine and feces, if present, will show up in our field of light. Complete the process by
treating with Anti-Icky-Poo Odor Remover.
Anti-Icky-Poo Odor Remover
Using a Black Light To Determine Which Cat is Spraying or Urinating Outside His Litter Box
Stink Finder/Stink-Free Black
UV Light and Flashlight
In multi-cat homes, it may be difficult to determine which cat or cats are indulging in urinary housesoiling. If possible, separate
cats and their litter boxes to determine the culprit. If that fails, your veterinarian can give the most likely offender a fluorescein dye
by mouth or by injection. The dye is invisible when diluted with urine, but can be detected by an ultraviolet (black) light. The dye
is administered to the cat in late afternoon. The next morning the area of the house frequented by the cat is darkened and
surfaces are scanned under the black light for the telltale fluoresing dye. This procedure is carried out for two days. If the dye
shows up in the cat's litter box instead of on unsuitable surfaces, you can declare this cat innocent and proceed to the next
suspect. If the evidence shows urine marks on vertical surfaces, you have not only found the culprit, you have also determined
that the behavior is spraying rather than inappropriate urination. This procedure should be reserved for the true detectives
among you.
Using a Black Light for Ringworm Detection
H. Ellen Whiteley, D.V.M.
Ringworm infections of the fungi Miccrosporum canis affecting dogs and cats can spread from pets to their human caretakers. The
diagnosis of ringworm involves your veterinarian examinating the dog or cat, taking fungal cultures for laboratory analysis, and in
some instances, examining the affected animal in a darkened room with a black light (hairs of cats infected with M. canis may
fluoresce a tell-tale, yellow-green color). However, only 80 percent of M. Canis infections fluoresce, and other fungal species in
animals do not. Therefore, use of the black light for ringworm diagnosis is usually considered to be a screening test only, and
suspected fungal infections should be confirmed by other laboratory tests.
Order Anti-Icky-Poo 1 quart spray
bottle. Price $19.95, Shipping $8.99
Order Anti-Icky-Poo, 2
quarts, shipping in 1 box.
Price $35, Shipping $8.99
Order Stink-Finder
Price $19.95
Shipping $5.99
Order Sink-Finder + 1 Quart Anti-Icky-Poo,
Price $35, Shipping in same box. $8.99