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  2. Feline hepatic lipidosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feline_hepatic_lipidosis

    Feline hepatic lipidosis, also known as feline fatty liver syndrome, is one of the most common forms of liver disease of cats. [1] The disease officially has no known cause, though obesity is known to increase the risk. [2] The disease begins when the cat stops eating from a loss of appetite, forcing the liver to convert body fat into usable ...

  3. Carnivore protoparvovirus 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnivore_protoparvovirus_1

    Carnivore protoparvovirus 1 is a species of parvovirus that infects carnivorans.It causes a highly contagious disease in both dogs and cats separately. The disease is generally divided into two major genogroups: FPV containing the classical feline panleukopenia virus (FPLV), and CPV-2 containing the canine parvovirus type 2 (CPV-2) which appeared in the 1970s.

  4. More L.A. cats appear to be infected with H5N1 bird flu - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/more-l-cats-appear-infected...

    Symptoms of H5N1 infection in cats include labored breathing, bloody diarrhea and neurological abnormalities — loss of motor control, seizures, depressed mental state, stiff body movements ...

  5. List of feline diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_feline_diseases

    Feline diseases are often opportunistic and tend to be more serious in cats that already have concurrent sicknesses. Some of these can be treated and the animal can have a complete recovery. Others, like viral diseases, are more difficult to treat and cannot be treated with antibiotics, which are not effective against viruses.

  6. Feline infectious peritonitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feline_infectious_peritonitis

    Most infections are either asymptomatic or cause diarrhea, especially in kittens, as maternally derived antibody wanes at between 5 and 7 weeks of age. The virus is a mutation of feline enteric coronavirus (FECV). From the gut, the virus very briefly undergoes a systemic phase, [6] before returning to the gut where it is shed in the feces.

  7. Dysentery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysentery

    The toxogenic species do not invade, but cause cellular damage by secreting toxins, resulting in bloody diarrhea. This is also in contrast to toxins that cause watery diarrhea, which usually do not cause cellular damage, but rather they take over cellular machinery for a portion of life of the cell.

  8. New virus that causes ‘staggering disease’ discovered in US ...

    www.aol.com/virus-causes-staggering-disease...

    A disease which can kill cats, both domestic and wild, has been discovered for the first time in the US. A variant of the rustrela virus-- related to the wider-known rubella virus which causes a ...

  9. Campylobacteriosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campylobacteriosis

    The disease is usually caused by C. jejuni, a spiral and comma-shaped bacterium normally found in cattle, swine, and birds, where it is nonpathogenic, but the illness can also be caused by C. coli (also found in cattle, swine, and birds), C. upsaliensis (found in cats and dogs) and C. lari (present in seabirds in particular). [citation needed]