Friday, August 3, 2012

Cats Eye

Cats Eye Infection and Treatment Tips 



Cats eye problems vary from time to time, from the most common ones to severe problems that require serious medical intervention. While some eye problems on cats are quite common, many clueless cat owners can freak out when they find put that their cats have eye problems. Worse, the owners may not aware that their cats have problem, thus let their cats in miserable conditions until it is too late. While even pet cats cannot avoid eye problems, there are some practical tips for treatment and home care if your cat gets cats eye problems.

cats eye

One of the most common cats eye problems is conjunctivitis, which is basically a form of eye infection that can occur single-handedly or together with other eye conditions. Almost all cats will likely to get this disease at least one in their lifetime (more if they are stray cats that live in unhygienic conditions). Three common bacteria that cause this cats eye problem are Feline Chlamydia, Feline Mycoplasma, and FHV-1 (Feline Herpes Virus type 1). Understanding the characteristics of these bacteria can help you get the best treatment for your cat.

First, you need to understand the common symptoms of cats eye infection. Initially, your cat may squint its eyes a lot, which should be the very first signal of some problems. Then, your cat’s eyes may show some liquid discharge that looks like tears but with dark colors such as red, yellow, gray, or even clear. The most obvious signs of cats eye problems is when you notice redness and swelling around your cat’s eyes pink membrane lining. Finally, you may notice extra symptoms like continuous sneezing and trembling. Those symptoms can appear together or just one or two symptoms, but they are enough signs to bring your cat to vet.

Cats eye problems can only be treated with medicine from a vet, but your next contribution also plays important role. If the infection is caused by Chlamydia or Mycoplasma, the vet will give antibiotics in a form of eye drop solution. However, just like Herpes virus in human, there is no cure for FHV-1. If your vet diagnoses your cat with FHV-1 infection, you can help your cat by minimize stressful condition, since FHV-1 infection symptoms are triggered by stress. With good care and proper treatment, there is no reason that you and your cat cannot handle common health problems in cats eye.

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