Knowing This Much About Feline Asthma Can Save Your Pet’s Life

March 16, 2009 by  
Filed under Asthma In Pets

Asthma is not only a disease that plagues humans. Even our lovely pets share this terrible disease with us. I guess they want to show solidarity with us by feeling the way we feel.

Feline asthma, as the name implies, is cat asthma. Specifically, feline asthma is a chronic inflammatory respiratory condition that affects cats.

This condition is caused by the constriction of the air passages in the lungs of cats. This leads to extreme difficulty in breathing for cats and severe periods of coughing and wheezing.

Feline asthma is mostly an allergic disease affecting cats, just the same way that it affects humans.

To solve this feline asthma, there is the need to first identify the allergen that is responsible for the asthma, in the first place. When identified, you should either get rid of the allergy or keep your cat as far away from it as possible.

Some of the allergens that cause, trigger or worsen this feline asthma include smoke, dust, pollutants, contaminants, etc.

To prevent feline asthma, there is the need to take care of where your cat sleeps and rid this place of the allergens that trigger the condition. Keep it clean of dust, pollen, smoke and other pollutants and contaminants. Just like in the case of human asthma, with your cat your key phrase should be –prevention is better than cure!

Another way of preventing feline asthma is to increase the humidity of your home.

Most importantly, when your cat experiences these serious of difficulty in breathing, wheezing and dry coughing, consult your veterinarian immediately so that you will get detailed advice on handling the situation.

Your veterinarian will give medications that will help to treat this feline asthma and also medications that will help to prevent it from reoccurring. Even though feline asthma can’t be cured, it can be treated and safely handled. It is not a hopeless situation when your cat starts having asthma attacks.

Unlike humans who use inhalers to get their asthma medications directly into the lungs for instant relief, cats don’t enjoy that luxury. But there is now the “pediatric spacer” which helps cats get instant relief from asthma.

The inhaler is attached to this pediatric spacer which is attached to a kind of small face mask. Then when the inhaler sprays into spacer, it keeps the asthma medication aerosolized- making it possible for the cat to get instant relief when it breaths through the face mask.

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  • Brooke Fraser

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