FLUTD/FUS Feline lower urinary tract disease
FLUTD
FUS diet
Feline Urinary
Tract disease and distilled water
FLUTD - adding water to
diet
FLUTD/FUS
Feline lower urinary tract disease
also see urinary problems
FLUTD
Question: Dear Dr. Mike,
I am very confused and concerned about my 3 year old neutered
cat. A little more than a
year ago, he began urinating frequently, with discomfort and
in very scant amounts. I live in a
very small town, but took him to the vet here. He prescribed
an antibiotic and said there
appeared to be no blockage and his bladder was empty...
this seemed to help a little, but
about a month later, the same thing happened. Over about
the next 6 months, my vet
prescribed 4 or 5 different antibiotics, told me to try an acidifying
food - science diet, but
because he never improved, and kept getting worse, finally recommended
I take him to a
specialist. (He never collected urine, but would take
his temperature, and externally feel his
bladder, which he said felt "thickened".) Anyway - I took
him to a feline specialist in a town 3
hours away...
By this time, he looked pretty bad and had been losing a lot
of weight... he is an average size
cat and was down to 8 1/2 pounds... I think his usual weight
was somewhere around 11 or 12
pounds. (you could see his hip and shoulder bones and his chest
bone(?) stuck out.) He
would urinate very frequently, and would mee-"howl" around the
house for no apparent
reason all of the time. He strained to urinate and defecate.
His stools were very infrequent,
small and soft, but he would have to strain and push to even
pass one... He licked his penis all
of the time... Often biting at it - it was usually red or purple
on the end. He makes noises
when he licks himself and seems as if he is in pain.
That doctor performed many blood tests, x-rays, sono-grams, urine
analysis, etc... and said
that his bladder was very thickened, there was blood in the
urine, but no evidence of crystals,
no tumors and nothing apparently wrong with his bowels (?).
He discussed very thoroughly
the history and causes of FLUTD, which in essence seemed to
be in either great debate, or
"unknown". He told me to change his diet to CDS, wet and
he prescribed ovaban (5mg per
day) (which he did say not a lot of vets use anymore - but felt
that short term use could be
beneficial) for 7 days and 1 capsule of cosequin for 30 days,
then 1/2 a capsule for another
30 days. After the 7 day treatment of ovaban, he was showing
no improvement, so the vet
said to continue it for another 10 days. My kitty greatly
improved, began eating again and
gained weight. He urinated much less frequently and in
much greater amounts... (the clumps
of urine were previously so small they barely held together
and were often difficult to "scoop"
- but after the ovaban, they were a little smaller than a hard
boiled egg would be.) This
progress began to decline pretty quickly after he stopped taking
the ovaban, and we repeated
the treatment (10 days worth) 2 months later (he had stopped
eating the wet CDS and was
not showing much interest in any food... - even the dog food
he used to love and try to steal
from the dog, he wouldn't touch). He finished this treatment
about 2 weeks ago, and is doing
ok...
Currently, he still licks himself often and bites at his penis.
It still looks irritated. He is an
inside-only cat. He does not appear to bathe himself.
He just hasn't been acting like himself
for the last several months. I would say he seems generally
depressed and in a little bit of
constant pain. His weight looks ok right now, but he does not
eat as much as he did when he
was taking the ovaban. He will urinate on a plastic bag
if there is one on the floor (he NEVER
used to use anything but the litter box). He eats about
1/2 can of CDS a day and has free
choice of dry food (I have given him lots of options on the
dry food and the one he eats now
is Purina one... ) I am not giving him the cosequin anymore....
(not really vets orders, I just
didn't think it was helping and worried that maybe that's why
he stopped eating the wet CDS)
- (I also tried all different kinds of wet acidifying foods
- CDS was the only one he would
eat)... He still meows around for no apparent reason sometimes,
but not at all like he used
to. He has begun sleeping with me again the last couple
of days. (Oh - lately (the past several
months -probably around the time we started the ovaban/cosequin
treatments,) he would lay
and sleep on the floor - which I thought was pretty strange.
He used to always sleep "up" on
something... the couch, a chair or bed, or on top of a piece
of furniture...) I started giving him
distilled water last week (when I read your comments on it)
and tried to mix it with his wet
food but he didn't touch it. He still has very scant and
small stools. He seems to want outside
a lot. I'm not sure if I should let him out. We
live out in the country - (no danger of traffic) but
he is declawed in the front. He loves to eat stringy things
and I'm afraid he would eat a lot of
grass - which would upset his stomach and I just don't know
if he needs any more problems.
OK- my questions... what do you think about the ovaban and cosequin
treatment? Are there
any other treatments you would try... I was wondering about
the Amitriptyline - could you tell
me about the pros and cons of that drug and what its purpose
is. Also - recently I discussed a
perineal urethostomy with my vet. My kitty has never been
blocked and there are apparently
no crystals present - but his penis has been irritated through
all of this.... Do you think a P.U.
could help? Also - I didn't ask him what the negative
side to a P.U. is? (Aside from the
enormous cost!) I think my vet is great and I really trust
him, but thought I would get a
second opinion before I considered the P.U. since it is such
a costly procedure that is not
"guaranteed" to work. And - what would be the pros and
cons to letting him outside and do
you think I should?
My cat is so great, I love him so much and I hate that he is
in pain... Are there cases of
FLUTD that are so severe they require putting the animal to
sleep? I don't want him to suffer,
and want to try whatever might help, but it's getting very frustrating
and expensive....
thank you so much for your help!
Dawn
Answer: Dawn-
The use of amitriptyline for cats with FLUTD is based on reports that
it has helped with
interstitial cystitis in people. This is also true for the use of glucosamine
products. We haven't
had too much luck with oral glucosamine/chondroitin products but have
a couple of feline
patients that seem to be responding to the use of Adequan, which is
an injectable medication. I
think that the product showing the most benefit in humans is Elmiron
(Rx). Hydroxyzine, an
antihistamine, is reported to help some cats, as well.
Amitriptyline is usually given once a day, at night, at dosages between
5 and 10mg/cat. It can
cause sedation but the most serious side effects are urine retention
and decreases in the numbers
of neutrophils and platelets. So far, our experience has been that
serious side effects are not very
common, though.
Perineal urethrostomy (PU) surgery should be considered a last resort,
I think. I did this surgery
pretty frequently early in my career but have not had to do one for
several years. Most cats did
fine with this surgery but it has the potential for really serious
complications, including an inability
to urinate -- and it can be hard to correct a problem once it occurs.
I have not tried pain control, but piroxicam may also be helpful since
pain is part of your cat's
problem.
The other thing to consider is further diagnostic work. An exploratory
surgery to examine the
bladder and to get biopsy and culture samples may be helpful. It may
also help to have dye
contrast X-rays to look for bladder abnormalities but I would recommend
having a veterinary
radiologist or veterinary internal medicine specialist do these
studies, as I think they can be hard
to interpret. You may have to consider traveling to a veterinary school
or large referral center for
this type of diagnostic work.
This can be a really frustrating situation. I have two or three cat
patients who have been to more
than one specialist and still have occasional problems with pain or
urinary tract disorders.
I can find dosages for you if you and your vet would like to pursue
any of these options. I really
do think additional diagnostic work might be the best next step, though.
I have not ever tried megestrol acetate (Ovaban Rx) for feline lower
urinary tract disease. I am
not sure why it would help but have a hard time arguing against success.
On the other hand, this
is a medication that has a high potential for serious side effects
in cats, so it has to be used with
that risk in mind (it induces diabetes pretty frequently and mammary
cancer, even in male cats,
occasionally). That risk has to be weighed against the improvements
you have seen in his
comfort level but if an alternative medication can provide the same
comfort level it may be better
to change medications.
I am not uncomfortable with having patients with FLUTD who are inside/outside
cats -- but I do
think it is really important to find them at least once a day and make
sure they are OK, since a
urinary blockage in a male cat is a serious problem and can cause a
cat to die. Some cats are
much more comfortable urinating outside and some drink more when allowed
to be
inside/outside cats, which also helps. If he roams or hides from you
outside, that wouldn't be a
good situation with the FLUTD.
Good luck with this.
Mike Richards, DVM
7/7/2000
FUS diet
Question: Hello,
I have two male cats, one is 11 yrs. old and the other is 6.
The youngest one has problems with (FUS). My vet suggested Science
Diet maintenace diet (dry food) for Seniors. I can buy it at the
petstore. It supposedly contains the lowest amount of magnesium
and
ash available on the market, and is low calorie. My vet has told
me
that it's ok to have the older cat on this diet also. I am not
particularly fond of Science Diet, so I've tried Innova, and Eukenuba,
but each time the FUS would return to the youngest cat. Meanwhile,
my
older cat has bouts of throwing up. He seems to do this when
we've
been gone, and his schedule changes.
I am concerned first of all, about having the older cat on this
diet being he is throwing up easily. He does go for maybe a week
without throwing up, but I usually see where he has about once
per week.
Secondly, is there something else I could or should be doing to
correct the FUS problem in the younger cat rather than feed him
this diet?
Both cats are over weight.
I was reading your June 2000 newsletter, and it prompted me to
write with my concerns.
Any help or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you
Regards, Peggy
Answer: Peggy-
For cats that have repeated bouts of FUS (FLUTD) dietary control is
the
best option. It is possible to use d,l-methionine or ammonium chloride
to
try to keep the urine acidified and then feed a diet that doesn't cause
urinary acidification, however this just doesn't seem to work quite
as
well, just based on our attempts to substitute this therapy for dietary
control. I can't really explain why, though, since I am pretty sure
that
these are the ingredients that are used in the urinary acidification
diets
to achieve urinary acidification.
Eukanuba makes veterinary diets that acidify the urine and so do other
cat
food companies, so there are a lot of choices in foods. If you keep
working
with your vet you should be able to find one that is OK with you, OK
with
your vet and that works for both cats. It may take a little time to
figure
out which one really does all this, though. If you can't find
one, you can
try a diet that works for the older cat's GI problems and use the urine
acidification medications and see if that works.
Mike Richards, DVM
6/10/2000
Feline
Urinary Tract Disease and distilled water
Question: Dear Dr. Mike:
Could you please give us any information you have as to whether distilled
water could help prevent Feline Urological Syndrome, especially crystals
and
blockages in cats, more particularly male cats. If distilled
water does help
prevent FUS, would a water softener installed in a home be as effective.
Also, if distilled water does help, how does it help?
Also, are there any foods you can buy at a pet store that help prevent
FUS.
We understand that a food low in magnesium will help. If this
is true, what
percentage of magnesium? We have a couple of overweight cats
(both male and
female) that we have been feeding CNM - OM Formula made by Purina (which
is a
diet formula) because one of them had a problem with FUS. We
fed all of them
this formula because of the difficulty separating them, and we were
under the
impression that feeding this to the cats that were not overweight would
not
hurt them. Is this true? When we bought more of this cat
food, it stated on
the bag that it was a new formula. I started feeding these cats
this new
formula, and one of the cats that is not overweight started having
diarrhea.
I called a number on the bag and told them of this problem and they
stated
that nothing had changed in the formula except they starting using
wheat germ
or wheat flower (I don't remember which) and also stated that some
cats have
problems with this. Can you suggest another type of food (possibly
that we
can buy at a pet store) that is similar to CNM - OM Formula?
We are
considering switching to Science Diet - Light Maintenance Formula which
is as
close to the percentages of protein, fat, fiber and magnesium as we
can find:
Science Diet
CNM - OM Formula
Crude Protein: min. 35.0%
min. 32.0%
Crude Fat: min.
7.0%
min. 6.0%
max. 9.5%
Fiber:
max. 10.0%
max. 14.0%
Magnesium: max.
0.07%
mg. max. 0.1%
Is Science Diet a good choice to help prevent FUS?
Also, we leave a bowl of dry food for these cats out at all times.
I now
realize that they are eating too much food and am considering limiting
how
much they eat. Will it hurt them to just start putting out limited
amounts
of food about three times a day considering they have always eaten
as much as
they liked?
Any information you can give us is greatly appreciated.
We just wanted to take time to also say that we find VetInfo very informative
and are very appreciative of your articles that almost always gives
us
information we use. Thank you so much and keep up the good work!
Shirley and Mike
Answer: Shirley and Mike-
I think that using distilled water sometimes helps a lot with feline
urinary tract disorders. But I think that it helps because some cats
are
more willing to drink it and therefore are less likely to get dehydrated
and the urine concentration is likely to be more dilute, which discourages
crystal formation. I don't know of any specific benefit to distilled
water
other than this.
I don't know of any study showing an increased risk of lower urinary
tract
disease associated with the use of water softeners. They do add sodium
to
the water but I don't think that has a bearing on crystal formation.
Low fat or low fat/high fiber diets don't help with weight loss if they
are
fed free choice. Cats just eat enough of these diets to get the calories
they want. You do have to limit the amounts fed if you are going to
see
weight loss. Since this works for any diet you chose (limiting the
amount
fed), I don't use weight loss diets too often in my practice.
I don't think that it is a good idea to use a diet that helps to prevent
feline lower urinary tract disorders (FUS, FLUTD) unless you are sure
one
of your cats has this problem. The reason for this is that the diets
that
are proven to work do so by causing a lowering of the urine pH. This
can
lead to the formation of calcium oxalate stones. If your cat
is known to
have FLUTD then this risk is worth taking. If your cat doesn't have
this
problem it isn't necessary to use a diet that actually increases the
risk
of another problem.
Magnesium may or may not have an impact on FLUTD but the current thinking
is that there is no effect or that the effect is very minimal in most
of
the literature. Acidifying the urine is the approach that seems
to work
best to limit problems with FLUTD. There are a lot of diets that do
this.
Purina and Alpo both make grocery store brands with this effect and
there
are numerous specialty diets available through your veterinarian, too.
The best approach to weight loss is to ask your vet to recommend an
amount
of food to feed after picking out the diet you want to use. Ask for
a total
daily requirement and then divide it up any way you want. Your cats
would
appreciate three or four small feedings as that more closely matches
their
natural eating pattern. Watch carefully to be sure the bigger cat isn't
mugging the smaller one for its meals.
Hope this helps some. If you need clarification of anything, don't hesitate
to ask part of the question again.
Mike Richards, DVM
2/16/2000
FLUTD - Adding
water to food
Suggestion: I feel the
need to share with you something that might help other cats
owners with this dreadful syndrome. I have a male cat three
years of age.
He has had this problem for over a year. We have tried everything
from
changing of the diet to flushing out his bladder.
I needed to let you
know something we have discovered that so far seems to be doing
the
trick. Adding water to the s/d wet . He was also taking
Clavamox twice aday and Baytril. THE MOST IMPORTANT PART
OF THIS IS THE
FORCING OF 40cc's of water everyday. Slowly he was
weaned onto a mixture
of w/d and s/d both dry and wet. Eventually to a diet of w/d
wet and dry.
The Baytril was stopped but the clavamox continued.
He is doing well now
and I check his p/h reading's at least once a week to make sure
it doesn't
go higher then 6.8 (not always easy to do) He is now on a diet
of just s/d
wet and dry THE 40cc's of WATER EVERYDAY and 1 tablet of Clavamox
every
other day. This may not work for everyone but it sure has
helped my guy
out up till now. I truly believe the 40 cc's of water everyday
is the
real trick to this. I have found out that cats with this type
of condition
need to have extra extra water to keep everything flowing freely.
Hoping this will help out others.
Michele
A: Michele
There is evidence that adding water to the diet, even just using canned
foods rather than dry foods, does help with feline lower urinary tract
disorders (FLUTD). So this is a good suggestion. Many cats will eat
canned
food with water added to it, which may be enough to help with the problem,
too.
Thanks!
Mike Richards, DVM
8/22/99
FLUTD / FUS and PHIL
Q: I am in dire need of help and advice
for my cat Phil. Phil is extremely special to me & is an an extraordinary
cat and companion. Phil has an extreme recurring case of FLUTD or FUS.
My vet has been very helpful and has kept Phil with me through many scares,
but I fear his condition is getting to a critical point. PLEASE HELP !!!
He is a bit over 5 years old now (born approx 1/93) and was neutered
(8/93).
He developed the first symptoms of FUS and partially blocked at under
a year old 10/93). He was switched to Feline c/d food at that point. He
had no problems for about a year when he blocked again (1/95). He blocked
again after about another year and was fine after that until this past
September, 1997. He blocked and when cleared there were many crystals &
definite cystitis.
At this point he was put on Feline s/d but blocked again after 1 month,
was unblocked, and blocked again the next day - no stones were seen in
the bladder by x-ray, but again there was many crystals ("sand"). I decided
then to have a P.U. (Perineal Urethrostomy) performed (10/97). He healed
nicely & was kept on the s/d food but blocked again less than 2 months
after the surgery. The crystals were analyzed as being calcium oxalate.
At this point, Phil was put on Eukanuba PH-O. He has since blocked again
twice, partially in January and completely just last week.
I am thoroughly worried. Has anyone had a similar experience??? Does
anyone know of any other foods that might be better for him??? What should
be my next course of action. I need to find a cure for my baby!!! I don't
have a lot of money and am unable to afford extensive visits to specialists.
As it is I have spent a lot of money on emergency visits. I am begging
for some advice because I cannot even begin to think of having Phil "put
to sleep".
I cannot even express my gratitude for any helpful advice. I have searched
the web quite extensively and while there is a lot of info on FLUTD / FUS,
there seems to be no specific information for a case as bad as Phil's is.
Thank you for your time and concern.
Bret
A: Bret-
There is a recent article on dogs with calcium oxalate stones in the
February 1998 issue of the Compendium of Continuing Education. Most of
the article appears to relate to cats pretty well based on other things
I have read. From what I can gather, it is necessary to remove all calcium
oxalate stones because they can not be dissolved and leaving even small
stones makes recurrence very very likely. An X-ray of your cat's bladder
to determine if any stones are present would thus be a good idea. If there
are stones, they have to be removed, even little ones. Then you can try
to prevent the recurrence of these stones. The recommendations are to avoid
diets that acidify the urine. I am not personally familiar with the Iams
diet but I think that it a diet made so that it does not acidify the urine.
You may want to check on this to be certain. Alternatives are Hill's k/d
diet and Purina NF. Get your cat to drink as much water as possible.
The
best way to do this is to feed canned food and to add as much water to
it as you can without destroying its palatability to your cat. Adding potassium
citrate to the diet is advocated by some veterinarians, too. It is also
important to prevent infection of the bladder as much as is
possible, especially if there are also struvite crystals or a history
of struvite problems. On the Veterinary Information Network someone mentioned
that Kirk's Current Therapy XII has a good chapter on this problem but
I am at home and that reference is at work. Your vet is likely to have
it, though. It might be worth reading it or asking your vet to review it.
One last thing, for what it is worth. Somewhere I saw a reference to risk
factor for bladder stones in cats that listed an entirely indoor existence as a risk factor. While I think it is prudent in many instances to keep
cats indoors, I guess this is something that could be changed if the condition
warranted it. I have no idea how much it would help to be allowed outdoors
and you would obviously have to assess how much risk being outdoors represented
and weigh all risks before considering letting an all-indoors cat have
access to the world at large.
Your letter was interesting to me because we are dealing with a very
similar case in our clinic. We saw a very small stone on X-rays and did
exploratory surgery to remove it and then couldn't find it. We flushed
the bladder and examined the bladder and just couldn't find a stone. We
took biopsy samples from the bladder and the pathologist thought that a
stone was probably present based on the type of inflammatory changes. We
are really hoping we flushed it out and just missed it since we were using
suction at the time. Follow up X-rays did not show a stone in the bladder
and so far things are OK. This cat had blocked on 5 or 6 occasions prior
to surgery. It is only a few weeks post-surgery at this time so we are
holding our breath and hoping that the problem won't recur.
Mike Richards, DVM
Feline
lower urinary tract disease (FLUTD)
Q: Dear Dr. Mike: I recently took my 2 year old,
neutered male cat to the vet. I noticed that he was having trouble urinating
and was trying to go all the time, even in unusual spots throughout the
house. The vet suspected FUS, but after examination saw that his blood
work was normal (though he did detect some crystals) and his bladder was
not enlarged. He put him on antibiotics and told me to switch to Science
Diet C/D. It's been 5 days now and he still seems to have the same problems.
This evening in fact he even threw up violently. He's scheduled for another
vet visit in 2 days. My questions for you are:
1) Could this condition be something other than FUS?;
2) Is this the course of treatment that you would go with?;
3) and are there any cat foods out there over the counter that would
work equally as well without the large expense of the Science Diet products?
A: Becky- The symptoms do sound like feline lower
urinary tract disease (FLUTD) which is what the "new" designation is for
feline urologic syndrome (FUS). The name change is proposed because it
is now recognized that there are a number of possible problems and that
urethritis may be as important as cystitis in this disease syndrome.
Infection is only one cause of FLUTD. I usually try to eliminate it
first, just like your vet. When that doesn't work I look for other causes
of the problem. In many cats, the urine is sterile but the discomfort is
still present. Crystal formation has traditionally been thought of as the
reason for this but inflammation for other reasons has recently been recognized
as an important factor in this condition. Currently, when cats do not respond
well to antibiotics it is common practice to try various anti-inflammatory
medications to attempt to relieve the clinical signs of discomfort. Amitriptyline
(Elavil Rx) is used for this due to side effects of its normal use as an
anti-anxiety medication that are beneficial to the lower urinary tract.
DMSO
(dimethyl sulfoxide) is also used in some cases. More recently there
has been interest in using the glycosamines (GAGs) to relieve inflammation.
It may be beneficial to consider using Arthroflex, Glycotabs or other GAG
type products to see if they will help. At present I don't know why the
inflammation occurs so we are just treating the symptoms which seems to
work well enough in many cases.
I have not seen a comparison study of the various diets available for
cats with FLUTD but I suspect that the diets that acidify urine and are
available in the grocery stores and pet stores are probably effective.
Of course, in the absence of any data that is just my best guess.
Mike Richards, DVM
Last edited 06/19/05
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