2. If the above symptoms appear, you can take a thermometer to measure the skin temperature first. If the temperature exceeds 39℃, it is judged as a fever. If it exceeds 40℃, it is a high fever. When a cat is found to have a fever, you can first take physical cooling, put ice cubes on the cat's abdomen, or if there is alcohol at home, you can rub it on your skin to increase heat dissipation. Secondly, give the cat clean and hygienic cold water, and let the cat drink more water to lower the body temperature.
3. If the cat's body continues to have fever after several hours, or the temperature drops and then rises repeatedly, it is recommended to take the cat to the hospital for diagnosis and treatment.