Laurie Anne Walden, DVMCleaning the litter box might not be your favorite chore, but it has a major benefit: it helps you monitor your cat’s health. Some serious illnesses that are common in cats affect their toileting behavior, urine output, and stool consistency. By scooping the litter box a couple of times a day, you can find evidence of these problems much sooner than you would if your cat toileted outdoors. Signs to Watch For Contact your veterinarian if your cat shows any of these signs:
You don’t need to use specialty products like color-changing cat litter (marketed as a health screening tool) to detect problems. If you decide to try cat litter that changes color according to pH or other chemical factors, keep a couple of cautions in mind. First, be sure your cat is willing to use the litter. The right kind of litter is whatever kind your cat is comfortable with. For most cats, this means unscented litter that is scooped daily and replaced regularly. Second, don’t rely on the litter to rule out a medical problem. Color-changing litter can’t be used for diagnosis and might not be accurate even for screening. If your cat shows signs of a problem but the litter’s color indicator hasn’t changed, contact your veterinarian anyway. What Urine and Stool Changes Might Mean Toileting Behavior Cats tend to hide signs of illness and pain, so we need to watch for subtle behavior changes as clues to medical problems. Visiting the litter box more often might be caused by increased urinary urgency, increased urine volume, or diarrhea. Visiting the litter box less often could indicate arthritis, other mobility problems, stress, general illness, or competition from other pets. Urinating and defecating outside the litter box have lots of possible medical causes, so don’t assume your cat is just being spiteful (cats don’t feel that kind of emotion). Urine Clumps When you scoop the litter, pay attention to the size of the urine clumps. Clumps getting bigger over time could mean that your cat’s urine volume has increased. Kidney disease, diabetes, and thyroid disease are all common in cats and cause increased urine volume. A decrease in size or number of urine clumps might mean that your cat is urinating somewhere else in the house. Male cats with urinary blockage (a life-threatening emergency) produce no or very small amounts of urine. Stool Signs of urinary problems (like straining or frequent squatting in the litter box) can be mistaken for constipation. Cats with constipation produce either small hard stools or no stools. Soft stool and diarrhea are more common than constipation in cats and have many possible causes. If your cat has soft stool that lasts for more than a day, blood in the stool, or small hard stools, contact your veterinarian. Save a sample of stool that’s less than 24 hours old in case your veterinarian needs it for testing. Image source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/134294785@N06/21911087653/ Laurie Anne Walden, DVMA hands-on physical examination is a valuable part of annual wellness visits as well as sick-animal visits. Examinations during wellness visits often uncover problems that weren’t obvious at home. That is the point of a wellness exam: we want to find problems early, before they become more serious and harder to treat. Wellness exams also let us track an animal’s changes over time. For sick animals, the physical exam is a crucial part of the diagnostic workup. Not all veterinary visits involve a full physical exam. Recheck visits typically include assessment of only a single area (like the ears). And high-volume, limited-service settings like vaccine clinics generally don’t offer full physical exams. A veterinarian can often complete a physical exam within a few minutes, so you might not realize how much information your veterinarian is gathering by looking at, touching, and even smelling your pet. The following basic assessments are part of a comprehensive physical examination. Breathing effort, mental status, posture, gait, general appearance, and reaction to clinic environment: The veterinarian assesses these elements before ever touching the animal. These items are clues to the urgency of a sick animal’s condition and also tell us an animal’s overall state of health, basic neurologic status, and anxiety level. If an animal without an urgent medical problem shows signs of significant fear and anxiety in the clinic, the veterinarian might stop the examination at this point and recommend returning another day with previsit antianxiety medication. Temperature, pulse, and respirations (TPR): The TPR is part of the standard vital sign assessment, along with mucous membrane color and capillary refill time (assessed with a quick touch of the gums). Some animals object to rectal thermometers, and other types of thermometers aren’t always accurate, so the veterinarian might skip temperature measurement for a well animal. Eyes, ears, nose, and oral cavity: Dental disease is very common in dogs and cats, and external ear disease is common in dogs. These problems are often first noticed during wellness exams. The veterinarian might or might not use an ophthalmoscope and otoscope to examine the eyes and ears, depending on the animal’s clinical signs and comfort level (inserting an otoscope into an inflamed ear canal could be painful). Chest: The veterinarian listens to the heart and lungs with a stethoscope to check heart rate and rhythm, identify abnormal heart sounds like murmurs, and assess lung sounds. Abdomen: Gentle palpation of the abdomen can reveal discomfort and possibly abnormal size of individual organs. Musculoskeletal system: The veterinarian assesses muscle mass, especially in senior animals that might have arthritis, and checks the joints for common problems like patellar luxation. Animals that are limping receive a more comprehensive orthopedic examination including range-of-motion tests of multiple joints unless this would be too painful without sedation. Skin and lymph nodes: The veterinarian looks for external parasites like fleas, evidence of itching (saliva staining of the paws, for example), hair loss, signs of skin infection, skin lumps, mammary gland masses, and enlarged lymph nodes. Skin problems are very common in dogs and cats and often turn up during wellness examinations. Many skin problems need further diagnostics, such as looking at a sample of cells through a microscope. Neurologic system: For well animals with no signs of neurologic disease, the veterinarian assesses basic neurologic function and mental status. A more comprehensive neurologic examination includes tests of nerve function of the head and limbs. For animals with neck or back pain, the veterinarian carefully palpates the spine to pinpoint the location of the pain. Urogenital system: Male dogs that have not been castrated have their testicles checked. They might also have rectal palpation to evaluate the prostate. Female dogs and castrated male dogs get a quick glance at the external genitalia and receive a more thorough examination if they have signs of a problem. Image source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/armyrotc/52943246855/ |
AuthorLaurie Anne Walden, DVM Categories
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September 2024
The contents of this blog are for information only and should not substitute for advice from a veterinarian who has examined the animal. All blog content is copyrighted by Mallard Creek Animal Hospital and may not be copied, reproduced, transmitted, or distributed without permission.
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