You need to take your cat to the vet immediately. Blood in urine usually means Cystitis (inflammation of the bladder), or some other bladder problem. This condition, much like human bladder infections, is very painful for the cat and in some cases (such as a blockage) can be life-threatening if not treated.
Cats usually develop urinary problems from stress or not drinking enough water and the urine becomes too concentrated. This can occur if the cat is fed only dry food (a cat has evolved to get moisture from its food and so have a low "thirst drive") or overly stressed.
The most important treatment, aside from vet-prescribed pain killers (and antibiotics if an infection is present), is to increase your cat's water intake. Feeding wet food instead of dry, adding a little extra water to the wet food and/or providing a water fountain to entice the cat to drink more water are very good options. Even adding "flavoured water" such as juice from canned fish to food or water will help entice a cat to drink.
If your cat is male, it is especially vital to make sure he is thoroughly hydrated. Male cats are much more susceptible to urinary tract infections (UTI's).
Renal failure is a likely cause (kidneys not working correctly). The kidneys of domestic cats are very prone to failure, especially in older cats. The cat should be taken to a vet urgently - many renal problems are manageable.
You need to take your cat to the vet immediately. Blood in urine usually means Cystitis (inflammation of the bladder), or some other bladder problem. This condition, much like human bladder infections, is very painful for the cat and in some cases (such as a blockage) can be life-threatening if not treated.
Cats usually develop urinary problems from stress or not drinking enough water and the urine becomes too concentrated. This can occur if the cat is fed only dry food (a cat has evolved to get moisture from its food and so have a low "thirst drive") or overly stressed.
The most important treatment, aside from vet-prescribed pain killers (and antibiotics if an infection is present), is to increase your cat's water intake. Feeding wet food instead of dry, adding a little extra water to the wet food and/or providing a water fountain to entice the cat to drink more water are very good options. Even adding "flavoured water" such as juice from canned fish to food or water will help entice a cat to drink.
You need to take your cat to the vet immediately. Blood in urine usually means Cystitis (inflammation of the bladder), or some other bladder problem. This condition, much like human bladder infections, is very painful for the cat and in some cases (such as a blockage) can be life-threatening if not treated.
Cats usually develop urinary problems from stress or not drinking enough water and the urine becomes too concentrated. This can occur if the cat is fed only dry food (a cat has evolved to get moisture from its food and so have a low "thirst drive") or overly stressed.
The most important treatment, aside from vet-prescribed pain killers (and antibiotics if an infection is present), is to increase your cat's water intake. Feeding wet food instead of dry, adding a little extra water to the wet food and/or providing a water fountain to entice the cat to drink more water are very good options. Even adding "flavoured water" such as juice from canned fish to food or water will help entice a cat to drink.
If your cat is male, it is especially vital to make sure he is thoroughly hydrated. Male cats are much more susceptible to bladder problems.
Yes she may have an infection and need antibiotics. My cat was prescribed amoxycillin and clavulanic acid, along with special urinary alkalizing food. The urinary alkalizing food would help even if she doesn't have an infection as it is to relive the pain of urination with blood, much like the urinary alkalizer powders such as Ural available for humans from the chemist. It is available from a vet.
Take the cat to the veterinarian immediately. It has internal injuries.
Internal bleeding near the bladder.
Blood delivers oxygen and nutrients to the body cells, and it removes waste and takes it to the kidneys where it is filtered from the blood and passed to the bladder. From there, it is passed out of the body through urinating.
The drug causes your blood vessels to shrink along with your urinary tract. I had problems urinating after taking the drug for one week. Stopped taking it and the problem still exists.
No it is positive feedback
Kidney Stone
Urinating, which is contracting the urinary bladder.
You should not give your cat phenoxybenzamine if he is having trouble urinating. The best thing to do would be to take him to a vet.
No
Talk to a vet or pet psychologist.
Neko no ketsueki is blood cat. The literal translation is "cat of blood"
See a veterinarian.
try and train dur brain
Cat urine is the cat's body getting rid of fluids, much like what a human does. Urinating also helps flush out any toxins in the body.
Your kidney was bruised. The dried blood is better than fresh, that indicates the damage is closed off. Pain at the point of impact or from urinating? If just from urinating, it is just the passage of the clots. I would expect that to stop fairly quickly. If it goes past a week, see a doctor.
that's not heathly at all! go see a dr sweety
You won't need a vaccine for this. When an animal starts urinating blood, this means that the kidneys are shot. You're better off to put the animal down, because eventually she will bleed to death.
Difficulty urinating, pain while urinating, blood in the urine, blood in the semen,chronic constipation, and pain in the lower back, upper thighs or hips are some of the first symptoms of prostate cancer.
The bunny may have a urinary problem if they are urinating blood. Only a vet can determine and treat the bunny.