(1), rodenticide poisoning.
This product is a powerful rodenticide. Cats will increase the permeability of pulmonary capillaries after eating by mistake, and a large amount of plasma will enter the lung tissue, leading to pulmonary edema. After eating for a few minutes to a few hours, cats will vomit, foaming at the mouth, and then diarrhea, cough, dyspnea, unconsciousness and mucosal cyanosis can be seen. A few cats will die within 2-4 hours after eating by mistake.
(2), organic fluoride rodenticide poisoning _
The drug is highly toxic, and cats will fidget after eating, with extremely active gastrointestinal tract, vomiting and diarrhea, running around, barking and paroxysmal convulsions all over the body.
6, pesticide poisoning
(1), organophosphorus poisoning
Organophosphorus pesticides such as trichlorfon and dichlorvos are widely used in agriculture. Cats will have salivation, tears, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, dyspnea, conjunctival cyanosis, muscle spasm, pupil contraction, coma and paralysis. Most of them died of respiratory diseases.
(2), chlorinated hydrocarbon poisoning
This insecticide can cause extreme excitement, mania, high depression, muscle tremor and contraction, salivation, hunger strike, diarrhea and other symptoms in cats.
Your cat can come into contact with hundreds of substances at home, some of which are highly toxic. If you think your cat may have been exposed to toxins, please check the label of the item first to understand its toxicity. Usually, the information about children on the package can be associated with cats, and some manufacturers even write toxic information about pets on the label.
There is nothing you can do at home for most poisoning incidents. If you suspect that your cat is poisoned, please consult your veterinarian or animal first aid agency in time. For some ingested poisons, your veterinarian may suggest inducing vomiting, but this is almost impossible for domestic cats. So you can only go to the vet, but be careful, remember to bring the product packaging when you go to the vet.
If no one witnessed the cat ingesting poison, it might be difficult to diagnose the disease caused by poisoning. Diagnosis can usually be made according to hematuria test or physical examination. Some poisons have specific antidotes, but the general treatments for poisoning include reducing extra absorption, delaying toxin absorption and accelerating toxin metabolism.
The above is the analysis of the symptoms of cat poisoning by Dr. Paw Paw, and the situation that may lead to cat poisoning, hoping to help the owner identify and prevent cats!