That means that about 97 % of young, otherwise healthy, cats who are showing signs
of dysuria (difficulty in urinating) don't have an infection and don't benefit from antibiotics.
Not exact matches
Common symptoms
of hemorrhagic cystitis include hematuria,
dysuria and pollakiuria.
Studies
of cats with clinical signs
of lower urinary tract disease (
dysuria, stranguria, pollakiuria) have consistently shown that the overall prevalence
of positive bacterial urine cultures is < 3 % [2,15].
They can be present without causing any symptoms in the cat, but they are very often associated with hematuria (blood in the urine), pollakuria (increased frequency
of urination) and
dysuria (difficulty passing urine).
The former symptom involves the presence
of blood in your cats urine while
dysuria is a term used to describe when your cat is straining to urinate.
«The most common symptoms
of bladder stones in the cat are hematuria (blood in the urine) and
dysuria (straining to urinate).»
The two most common signs
of bladder stones are hematuria and
dysuria.
The former symptom involved the presence
of blood in your dogs urine while
dysuria is a term to describe when your dog is straining to urinate.