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Why Every Vet Emphasizes Feline Peritonitis in Cats in 2025 🐱⚠️

  • 189 days ago
  • 9 min read

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Why Every Vet Emphasizes Feline Peritonitis in Cats in 2025 🐱⚠️

Why Every Vet Emphasizes Feline Peritonitis in Cats in 2025 🐱⚠️

By Dr Duncan Houston BVSc – Peritonitis—life‑threatening inflammation of the abdominal lining—is seldom discussed but vitally important in feline care. From septic causes to the devastating Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP), understanding this condition in 2025 can guide early action and vastly improve outcomes. In this comprehensive guide, we explore causes, red flags, diagnostics, treatment, and prevention to protect your cat’s health. 🩺

📌 What Is Peritonitis?

Peritonitis is inflammation of the peritoneum (abdomen lining), often involving fluid buildup, severe pain, and systemic illness. It can be septic (infectious) or aseptic (sterile inflammation), depending on the cause :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}.

🔬 Types & Causes

  • Septic Peritonitis: Bacterial infections from intestinal perforation, urinary leakage, or penetrating wounds :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}.
  • Aseptic Peritonitis: Organ ruptures, traumatic injury, cancer, and viral diseases like FIP :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}.
  • Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP): A mutated feline coronavirus triggers severe inflammation and effusion; can be “wet” or “dry” form :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}.

👀 Signs & Symptoms

Symptoms vary by cause but often include:

  • Abdominal pain or swelling (ascites)
  • Lethargy, fever, poor appetite, vomiting
  • Pale gums, rapid breathing, signs of shock :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
  • FIP-specific symptoms: fluid buildup in abdomen/chest (“wet” FIP), weight loss, eye or neurological signs (“dry” FIP) :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}.

⚠️ When to Seek Immediate Vet Care

This is a veterinary emergency. Rush your cat to the clinic if you notice:

  • Sudden abdominal distension or pain
  • Dramatic appetite loss or vomiting
  • Persistent fever or lethargy
  • Difficulty breathing, signs of collapse/shock
  • Neurological or visual abnormalities (in suspected FIP)

🩺 Diagnostic Approach

  1. Physical Exam: Checking abdomen for pain, fluid wave, temperature, perfusion.
  2. Bloodwork: CBC and chem panel revealing inflammation, organ function, and dehydration.
  3. Imaging: Ultrasound or X‑rays to identify fluid and organ issues :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}.
  4. Abdominocentesis: Fluid sampling to determine if septic or sterile, including cytology and culture :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}.
  5. FIP testing: Effusion analysis, protein ratios, PCR when fluid is present :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}.
  6. Additional Tests: Cultures, biopsies, chest drains, or surgical exploration as needed.

💊 Treatment Strategies

Septic/Aseptic Peritonitis

  • Emergency stabilization with IV fluids, pain management, and antibiotics.
  • Surgical intervention to repair perforations, remove foreign objects or abscesses.
  • Post‑op supportive care—nutrition, fluids, pain control, close monitoring.

Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP)

Once considered fatal, promising antiviral treatments (eg. GS‑441524, remdesivir) are now legally available in some countries; recovery rates exceed 80% in treated cats :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}.

  • Effusive (“wet”): Treat with antivirals, drain abdominal fluid if needed.
  • Non-effusive (“dry”): Treat with antivirals and immunomodulation—outcomes vary, but early treatment improves prognosis :contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}.
  • Supportive care: Nutrition, anti‑inflammatories, fever control, and possible immunostimulants.

🏥 Prognosis & Long-Term Outlook

  • Septic/Aseptic: Varies on cause and treatment speed—prompt surgery yields better results.
  • FIP: Historically fatal—but modern antiviral treatments offer new hope with high recovery rates when administered early :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}.

🛡 Prevention & Best Practices

  • Monitor your cat’s health—weight, appetite, abdominal changes.
  • Schedule regular wellness visits and blood screening, especially for senior cats.
  • Keep the environment safe: secure boundaries, no access to toxins or sharp objects.
  • Reduce FIP risk in multi-cat settings with clean litter hygiene and minimize stress :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}.
  • Avoid rough handling; sterile surgical technique to minimize complications.

🤝 Role of Ask A Vet, Woopf & Purrz

The Ask A Vet app offers immediate tele­triage to assess abdominal symptoms and direct you to emergency care. Woopf supports recovery with gentle heating pads, hydration tools, and feeding assistance. Purrz helps minimize stress and maintain a calm rehab space—key during recovery from major abdominal procedures or FIP therapy. 🐾

📣 Final Takeaway

Peritonitis in cats is a hidden but potentially fatal condition—especially when linked to FIP or untreated abdominal infections. In 2025, advancements in antiviral treatments and surgical care mean earlier detection saves lives. If your cat shows signs of abdominal discomfort, swelling, fever, or sudden illness, seek veterinary care immediately. Combining expert medical care with home support tools gives your cat the best chance at recovery. ❤️🐱

📞 What to Do Next

  1. Note any changes in your cat’s abdomen, behavior, appetite, or fever.
  2. Contact your vet or consult via Ask A Vet immediately.
  3. Provide samples (urine, if requested) and prepare for imaging or fluid sampling.
  4. Begin treatment promptly—IV fluids, antibiotics, antivirals, or surgical care.
  5. Support recovery with Woopf & Purrz tools—hydration, comfort, stress relief.
  6. Follow-up regularly to monitor healing and prevent recurrence.
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