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How to take care properly for sick cats so that they are from illness
How to take care properly for sick cats so that they are from illness? The cat is a pet that is very close to humans, but just like the other animals, cats are susceptible, even including the dangerous diseases that can spread to humans. The cat is a pet that is very close to humans, but just like the other animals, cats are susceptible, even including the dangerous diseases that can spread to humans.
Common disease in cats
1. Rabies (Rabies)
Rabies is a viral disease transmitted by the bite of an infected animal; the infection directly affects the central nervous system, causing
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Recognizable symptoms are such as a red nose, red eyes, fever and loss of appetite.
3. Feline Panleukopenia Disease (FP)
Feline Panleukopenia disease, also known as fever coughs in cats. Cats with this disease often have white blood cell count plummeted, causing a direct impact on the immune system and making animals suffer additional impairment and other diseases. Common symptoms are such as loss of appetite, diarrhea, vomiting, can spread to humans if it is bad, so the sick animals should be isolated to avoid contact, bitten and infected.
4. FIV Disease
FIV (Feline Immunodeficiency virus) disease is virus immunodeficiency that transmits from infected animals to healthy cats. A common phenomenon is an ,inflammation in the animal's mouth making poor appetite, respiratory disease and chronic inflammation.
5. FIP Disease
FIP (Feline Infectious peritonitis) is evidence of peritonitis in cats and is a very dangerous disease caused by a virus. The virus exists in two forms in a wet and the other is in the dry, not wet abdominal offer. All can have two signs such as lethargy, fever, diarrhea, vomiting and loss of appetite.
6.
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External parasites include fleas, scabies, beetles, mites in the ear, skin etc ... it can cause itchy skin peeling. Some internal parasites have pinworms, whipworms, parasites ... We live in the intestinal tract; consume nutrients and make cats grow slowly, anorexia, diarrhea, dehydration ... and if it is severe and untreated, cats can be fatal.
9. Diabetes
It is also the prone disease in cats; the main reason is due to endocrine disorders especially in cats being fed well, obesity. When infected cats are often voracious and consequently make no reduced risk.
10. Skin Diseases
Skin disease in cats is diverse and called as skin disorders, can be divided into 4 types: skin infections, skin diseases related to immune, skin diseases, genetic and disease inside the skin. Some types cause common diseases, such as sheds, acne pimples, scabies, sores...
Disease prevention for cats:
Most inflammatory diseases in cats such as rabies, FIV, URF, FIP ... can be prevented by vaccination. Besides, need to hygiene shelter, food and animal body. Do not use bowls with food to contain the disease was. Once you found infected cats, should not carry holding, stroking, let us live with the man who should consult a veterinarian, using essential
My cat was 7 months old and he was diagnose with FELINE INFECTIOUS PERITONITIS or known as FIP. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) is a viral disease of cats caused by certain strains of a virus called the feline coronavirus. Most strains of feline coronavirus are avirulent, which means that they do not cause disease, and are referred to as feline enteric coronavirus. Cats infected with a feline coronavirus generally do not show any symptoms during the initial viral
This virus is an extremely common cause of respiratory disease and often results in chronic, often life-long, infection with intermittent recurrences causing respiratory and sometimes eye disease. It is spread easily through airborne respiratory secretions and direct contact with a carrier cat or contaminated objects. Calicivirus a common viral infectious respiratory disease, it can also cause mouth sores resulting in severe oral pain. Spread by direct contact with an infected cat or by contact with contaminated objects. The virus is very resistant to disinfectants and persists in the environment. Panleukopenia a severe, highly infectious and sometimes fatal disease of the gastrointestinal tract, the immune system and the nervous system. The disease is named for the characteristic severe decrease in white blood cells, the body’s defense against disease. The virus is very persistent in the environment. This virus spreads by direct contact with infected cats or by contact with viral particles in the
Heartworm disease in cats is different from heartworm disease in dogs. Unlike the dog, the cat is not a natural host for heartworms. Because of this, very few heartworm larvae make it to adulthood in a cat’s body. In dogs, invading worms know exactly how to find their
The article seemed to imply that the parasite naturally occurs within the feline population. The article does not mention
3. Pick a common behavior problem in cats or dogs, other than urine marking or scratching, and explain the best ways to deal with it.
Premises support (3): (9) Cats are more likely to carry rabies. (10) They also share parasites or infectious microbes with humans. (11) Outdoor cats are the primary hosts of toxoplasmosis, which effects around 30% of humans.
If you have a cat, you need to do everything you can to protect it from contracting feline bordetella, which is a very contagious respiratory disease that your cat can get from being around other cats. Bordetella can weaken your cat’s immune system and allow it to more easily catch other diseases. Bordetella can be detrimental for young cats and older cats, both which traditionally have weaker immune systems.
Feline herpesvirus is a highly contagious virus that causes feline viral rhinotracheitis. Feline viral rhinotracheitis is an acute upper respiratory infection that is one of the most common infections in cats. Feline herpesvirus is also associated with several less common diseases, which include keratitis and feline herpesvirus-associated dermatitis. After recovery, feline herpesvirus typically becomes latent though it stays with the cat for the remainder of his or her life. The virus may become reactivated due to stress or corticosteroid treatment, allowing it to be passed onto other cats.
pestis infections (Gage, et. al., 2000). During 1924–2006, a total of 13 human cases of primary pneumonic plague were documented in the United States, and greater than five were associated with cats (felids). Twelve cases of plague transmission from nondomestic carnivores to humans have been documented, including a fatal case of human pneumonic plague in 2007 that resulted from direct contact with an infected puma (Puma concolor). The lesions of the orally infected cats were consistent with those previously described for naturally occurring Y. pestis infections in cats and corroborate the contention that cats most commonly contract plague by eating Y. pestis-infected rodents and not via flea bite. The histopathology of Y. pestis disease in these cats is comparable to that described for human plague (Eisen, et. a, 2008). Although there are historic suggestions of cats being susceptible to plague, it was not until the latter part of the 1900s that plague was recognized as a significant disease. It was then recognized that infected cats could serve as a threat to human health. Cats are considered rare among carnivores in that they are unusually susceptible to disease after Y. pestis exposure. In 1999, a total of 42 plague cases in cats (Felis cattus) were confirmed from the three states where plague is most common: California (7), Colorado (9), and New Mexico (26) (Watson, et. al, 2001). Despite the known association of felids with human plague, the prevalence of Y. pestis infection in non-domestic cats remains relatively
Symptoms of cat scratch fever includes bumps or blisters near infection site, swollen lymph nodes near infection site, fatigue, headaches, low grade fevers, nausea, chills, and overall discomfort. Some of the more rare symptoms include loss of appetite, sore throat, and weight loss. Symptoms such as blisters, bumps, and swollen lymph node do not appear randomly, they will appear around the source of infection. All symptoms will take about three to fourteen days to show up.
Kennel Cough is a common infection that can affect both cats and dogs. It is a contagious condition which is a mix of bacteria and viruses that aim at the animals respiratory system. Kennel Cough is spread through airborne droplets produced by sneezing and coughing. These agents also spread through contact with contaminated surfaces. The best way to prevent the spread of disease is to have the animal vaccinated, you can also separate a sick or contagious animal by having them in an isolation ward away from healthy animals. Maintaining clean practises will also prevent anyone being affected by spraying F10 in an area where an infected animal has been, allowing a ten minute timeframe in between cleaning to ensure elimination.
Cat scratch fever, also known as cat scratch disease (CSD), is given to human by cats. It can be contracted from a bite or scratch from a cat, it comes from a bacterium known as Bartonella Henselae which is a gram-negative rod. About 40% of cats carry the disease but most of them are around the age of 1 year old or younger. Kittens at this age are learning how to use their teeth and claws as ways to protect themselves or catch their prey. People who have kittens are more likely to get it since the kittens tend to scratch and bite as a way of playing. Cats get the bacteria from either a bite from a tick or from the feces of fleas on their skin. When a cat scratches or bites at a flea, the bacteria will either get stuck underneath their claws or in their teeth, causing the cat to be infected with the bacteria. Cats can also get it from fighting or playing with a cat that is already infected with the disease.
Cats came to the United States from Europe. They came from Egypt before that, and they were treated very special in Egypt because one of their gods was a cat. This is when they got domesticated, which was almost 4,000 years ago. Even though they have been domesticated they still do what every living thing does. In order for cats to survive they must get energy, move and grow, adapt to the environment protect themselves and reproduce.
When classically looking at viruses and other diseases, humans are the first species that comes to mind, but there are many other species of animals that are equally affected by these diseases as well. Generally, the viruses that these species fall victim to exclusively affect a single species without affecting other species. Feline Leukemia virus for example can be found exclusively in cats. More specifically, this Feline Leukemia is a retrovirus, which leads to metastasis, tumor growth, and slow infections to develop. The FLV is one of the most common ways that cancer occurs in cats weakening their immune systems and making them more apt to die from other causes that would other is less harmful to healthy cats. Cats infected by this virus
To begin, understand that feline panleukopenia is named for what the parvovirus does- depletes the quantity of white blood cells, weakening the immune system. Feline panleukopenia virus, depends on cells in the S phase for replication of the virus, resulting in an affinity for cells such as those found in the digestive tract, lymphoid tissues and bone marrow which are rapidly and frequently