Back mite is a kind of mite that spreads in cats. After infection, it will invade the skin and cause scaly induration (scabies) and severe itching.
Usually the site of the disease is around the head, neck and front legs, and it should be killed with corresponding drugs.
Second, cats are allergic
If a cat is allergic, it will show many abnormal behaviors, including:
1. Grab yourself and bite until you are injured and bleed;
2. The skin is slack and wrinkled;
3. Make a strange sound;
4. Irregular gait, abnormal rhythm and strange jumping posture;
5. Severe epilepsy.
If you suspect that your cat has allergies, you need to take it to a pet hospital to check allergens and take specific treatment measures.
Three. Infectious peritonitis (FIP) in cats
Most shovel officers have heard of infectious peritonitis in cats.
This is due to misinformation and misdiagnosis by some quacks. Detection of cat coronavirus means that 100% of infectious peritonitis dies.
How many cat-loving shovel officers were scared to tears, and some even euthanized good cats, which led to tragedy for no reason!
The possibility of variation of cat coronavirus is less than 2%, and there are many kinds of variation, most of which are harmless. Only one specific mutation can cause infectious peritonitis in cats, which is very unlikely.
Tips:
If the shovel officer meets a doctor and tells you that cat coronavirus is detected, it will develop into cat infectious peritonitis.
If you want to pay the hospitalization fee, change hospitals quickly. Such a doctor is either ignorant or unscrupulous!
Fourth, acromegaly
Acromegaly is caused by excessive secretion of growth hormone in cats, usually caused by pituitary adenoma.
It shows that the head and body organs (including internal organs) of cats will increase abnormally, and acromegaly is also related to diabetes and heart disease.
At present, there is no satisfactory treatment for acromegaly in cats.
Five, autonomic nervous dysfunction
Autonomic nerve dysfunction (also known as Key-Gaskell syndrome) is caused by abnormal nervous system, and its pathogenesis has not yet been determined.
Cats with autonomic nerve dysfunction usually have loss of appetite, vomiting, no response to light sources, and the position of the third eyelid is elevated (the white membrane covers the eyeball).
Dehydration, constipation, difficulty in eating and urinating, and decreased tear secretion.
The current treatment can only alleviate the above symptoms, but the quality of life of cats will get worse and worse, and most cat owners finally choose to euthanize their cats.