Templated 2 Templated 2

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Frontline Plus For Cats : Recognizing the Signs of Kidney Failure

Its critical to seek immediate veterinary treatment when you notice the signs of a problem kidney in a cat. The earlier your cat gets treatment the more chances she has for a longer life with you. While chronic renal failure arrives over a long period of time, acute kidney failure is an emergency. Here's some tips to recognizing the symptoms of kidney failure in cats.

Feline kidneys are vulnerable to a number of life-threatening disorders that can lead to a failing kidney in a cat or chronic renal failure. Your vet would probably agree with the statistics that they see more cats 7 years and older that are showing signs of kidney failure in cats.

The risk for feline kidney disease may be inherited. Some long-haired breeds like Angoras and Persians and short-haired cats like the Abyssinian are more genetically predisposed to kidney problems, either acute or chronic renal failure.

The main difference between chronic and acute kidney failure in cats is that acute renal failure is a very severe situation that occurs relatively suddenly - over a week or a month. Chronic renal failure creeps up on your cat over a longer time, years even.

Common causes of acute renal failure include blockages that prevent a good flow of blood to the kidney in a cat or stones and inflammations blocking the flow of urine from the kidney into the bladder. The most common cause of kidney failure in cats occurs when your cat swallows a toxic substance like antifreeze, pesticides, cleaning fluids and human medications.

Signs Of Kidney Failure In Cats

  • Occasional vomiting
  • Increase in water consumption
  • Increase in urination
  • Weight loss Loss of appetite

Your vet may use a couple of terms "polydipsia" or "polyuria". Polydipsia means that your cat is drinking a lot of water - lots of it. On the other end, polydipsia means that your cat is urinating a lot - lots and lots. In fact, you this may be the first sign your recognize of a problem kidney in a cat. When you clean the litter box you find numerous pee-balls of cat litter, or unusually large ones.

If your vet suspects kidney failure in a cat she will evaluate your cat's BUN. BUN stands for blood urea nitrogen, as well as the creatinine levels. When these are elevated it means your cat's kidneys aren't working right and need extra help.

Traditionally, treating renal failure in cats is determined by the disorder causing the condition. If acute kidney failure is caused by a urinary tract blockage the stone must be removed immediately. Treating chronic renal failure is done with a more conservative approach. This may include intravenous fluid therapy and changes to diet.

1 comment:

  1. This title has nothing to do with the article.

    ReplyDelete

This blog Frontline Plus For Cats are dofollow blog means when you making any comment you will get backlinks make sure your achor tag relevant for your target keywords You can use some HTML tags

Make your comments as relevant to the post as possible.

I reserve the right to remove or edit your comments as I please according to my own set of guidelines which only I know but is not limited to bad implications and making you sound bad.

No comment that is centered in initiating in arguments will continue to be approved and I reserve the right to totally ban you from getting your comments approved in my blog in the future.

No making fun of your fellow comment makers.

Strictly no advertising in your comments and no URLs may be posted if it will not help others with your resource in relation to the article that you are commenting.

I reserve the right to add more rules as I see possibilities or as needed.

admin
Frontline Plus For Cats