1. Dorsal mite
The dorsal mite is a mite that spreads from cat to cat. When infected, it invades the skin and causes scaly induration (mange) and severe itching.
The usually affected areas are around the head, neck and front legs and should be killed with appropriate medication.
Second, Cat Allergies
If cats have allergies, they will show many abnormalities Behaviors, including:
1. Grab and bite oneself until wounded and bleed;
2. Loose and wrinkled skin;
3. Send out Strange voice;
4. Irregular gait, abnormal rhythm, strange jumping posture;
5. Severe epileptic seizure.
If you suspect that your cat has allergies, you will need to take it to a veterinarian for an allergy check and specific treatment.
Three, Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP)
Most owners Everyone has heard of Feline Infectious Peritonitis,
This is due to some quack misinformation and wrong clinics, testing for feline coronavirus means 100% of Infectious Peritonitis deaths.
The cat-loving owners were so frightened that they cried bitterly, and some even euthanized a good cat, causing a tragedy for no reason!
Feline coronaviruses are less than 2% likely to mutate, and there are many types of mutations, most of which are harmless. Only one specific mutation can cause feline infectious peritonitis, which is very unlikely.
Warm reminder:
If the owner meets a doctor and tells you: Check out feline coronavirus , it will develop into feline infectious peritonitis.
If you are asked to pay for hospitalization, quickly change to another hospital. Such doctors are either ignorant or unscrupulous!
IV. Acromegaly
Acromegaly is caused by It is caused by excessive secretion of growth hormone in cats, usually caused by pituitary adenomas.
It manifests as abnormal enlargement of the cat’s head and body organs, including internal organs, and acromegaly is also associated with diabetes and heart disease.
Currently, there is no satisfactory treatment for acromegaly in cats.
V. Autonomic dysfunction
Autonomic dysfunction (also known as Key-Gaskell syndrome) symptoms) are caused by abnormalities of the nervous system, and the cause of the disease has not yet been determined.
Cats with autonomic dysfunction typically experience loss of appetite, vomiting, unresponsiveness to light sources, elevated position of the third eyelid (the white membrane covering the eyeball),
dehydration , constipation, difficulty eating and urinating, decreased tear production.
Current treatments only relieve the above symptoms, but the cat’s quality of life will get worse and worse, and most cat owners eventually choose to euthanize their cats.