Feline
Lower Urinary Tract Disease
|
Most cat owners are
aware of F.U.S. or Feline Urological Syndrome. Recently, several experts have
suggested the use of the term Feline Lower Urinary Tract Disease, or FLUTD, because it
more correctly encompasses all the forms and the diverse causes of the disease.
Feline Lower Urinary Tract
Disease is a condition in which stones or crystals may form in the urinary tract - and
there are a variety of causes.
FLUTD accounts for
nearly 10% of all cat admissions to veterinary hospitals and without proper nutritional
management, obstructive FLUTD recurs at the depressing rate of 50 to 70%. |
 |
The Syndrome can occur
in any age of cat and sometimes with very little warning. The purpose of this
article is to help you understand the complex causes and management of this dreadful
condition and enable you to spot it in your own cat at an early stage because a cat with a
blockage due to FLUTD is indeed true medical emergency.
FLUTD accounts
for nearly 10% of all cat admissions to veterinary hospitals without proper nutritional
management, obstructive FLUTD recurs at the depressing rate of 50 to 70%.
What causes FLUTD?
Although this disease complex has
been intensively studied for decades, it is still an enigma. Many diverse and
fundamentally different factors that may be single, multiple and interacting, or unrelated
have been implicated in the cause or development of FLUTD. Dr. Carl Osbourne, a
leading researcher in this field, has postulated the causative factors outlined in the
table below:
Related Factors
Include:
|
Time of
year: |
A higher incidence has been
reported in late winter and early spring. Perhaps due to months of decreased
activity - and in many areas -- forced confinement. |
|
Obesity: |
Several studies have found
increased risk with increased weight - does this also correlate with inactivity? |
|
Heredity: |
There is little doubt that your
cat's genes will have an important part to play in the susceptibility to this disease. |
|
Vitamin
A: |
This myth must be
debunked. while it is very true that vitamin A deficiency causes sloughing of cells,
and this could contribute to plug formation -- in actual fact, vitamin A deficiency is
extremely rare and therefore is not a real contributing factor. Neither will
additional vitamin A be of any benefit. |
Despite the exhaustive
nature of these factors, in real life, the majority of cases of urethral obstruction are
associated with the formation of struvite crystals -- and we refer to this as obstructive
FLUTD.
Obstructive FLUTD
is a condition in which stones or crystals form in the cat's urinary tract -- these stones
or crystals may then obstruct urine flow and irritate the delicate lining of the urethra
and bladder. These areas then become irritated and inflamed causing further shedding
of cells - these cells, together with the crystals already present form "urethral
plugs". The signs of FLUTD in your cat will depend on the quantity of these
plugs and will vary from difficult urination; to bloody urine' to complete blockage of the
cat's urethra and penis. This is an excruciatingly painful condition and is
potentially fatal. Immediate veterinary attention
in paramount -- the blockage must be relieved quickly or your cat will die.
What Do We
Really Know?
 |
We know that diet
modification can prevent, or at the very least reduce, the formation of struvite
crystals.
|
 |
We know that diet
modification can even be used to dissolve struvite stones.
|
 |
We know that about
two thirds of all obstructive cases are due to struvite.
|
 |
It has been
established that diets designed to limit struvite formation are unquestionably appropriate
and extremely beneficial for cats who have already had obstructive FLUTD.--Without dietary
modification these cats will usually regress.
|
 |
On the other hand, we
also know that about one three of all obstructive cases are due to other minerals of which
the most common is the Calcium stone or urolith -- these must be surgically removed.
|
 |
We also know that not
all cats obstruct.
|
Suspected
Causes of FLUTD
How to Reduce Risk:
1) Schedule
regular veterinary check ups-particularly urinalysis if your cat has had the condition
before.
2) If your
veterinarian advises a special diet - use it religiously until told otherwise.
3) Make sure your
cat always has access to fresh water.
4) Make sure the
litter box is regularly cleaned and in it's usual place. This should be such as to
give the cat some privacy.
5) Encourage play
and exercise - this is even more important if your cat is confined.
6) Do not allow
your cat to become obese.
7) Pay attention
to your cat.
This information taken from Cat Care Guide - Halvor
Moorshead - 11th Edition
Back to Health Topics |