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Cats and Hairballs

feline-pet-care-guide

Download this Pet Care Guide – PDF

Cats spend a significant time of their lives cleaning and grooming – as much as 1/3 of their waking hours. While this is natural instinct makes them ideal house pets, it can lead to some uncomfortable side effects.

The problem begins during the grooming process when cats often swallow their own hair. The cat’s tongue is the culprit. It has tiny, barb-like projections on its surface, which pull loose hair from the coat. Because of the inward angle of these barbs, the hair remains lodged on the tongue’s surface until the cat swallows it. Since hair is largely insoluble protein, cannot be dissolved by the cat’s digestive system. As this undigested hair begins to knot in the stomach and accumulate in the gastrointestinal tract, it can interfere with normal digestion and elimination.

Symptoms of hairballs include constipation, lethargy, dry cough, and even vomiting. It is also the most frequent cause of depression and loss of appetite in cats.

The most dramatic and obvious symptom is a regurgitated hairball, which is often tubular in shape. Besides being an inconvenience to clean up, it is a definite sign that your cat has a problem and needs help.

Hairballs are very uncomfortable for your cat and can lead to serious complications, but are rarely fatal.

What Can Be Done

Daily brushing of the cat’s coat to remove loose hair is a good preventive medicine. Longhaired breeds like Himalayans and Persians need special attention. During the spring when all cats shed, daily brushing is especially important.

If your cat has chronic hairball issues please ask us for our professional advice. We have a variety of medication and diets to treat hairballs. Remember, your cat relies on you for help in relieving this problem. A program of frequent brushing, regular use of a hairball remedy and following the advice of your veterinarian is all it takes.