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A cat that strains in the litter box and leaves nothing behind is not “being weird” that can be a clock-starting emergency. Julie Schwenzer and Dr. Mike LoSasso from Frisco Emergency Pet Care walk through urinary problems in dogs and cats with a clear focus on what becomes urgent, what can wait for a regular appointment, and what you should never ignore.
We talk about why female dogs and cats tend to get more urinary tract infections, what pet parents typically notice at home (frequent trips, accidents, blood in urine), and why quick testing matters. Then we shift to the scary cases: urinary obstruction. Dr. LoSasso explains how stones can lodge in the male dog urethra and why that can rapidly turn life-threatening as toxins and potassium build up when urine cannot leave the body.
Male cats get their own spotlight because their urethra narrows dramatically near the end, making them prone to “blocked tom” episodes from tiny stones or mucus plugs. We cover what emergency treatment usually involves (catheterization, IV fluids, electrolyte checks, multi-day hospitalization), why the bill can be a shock, and why recurrence is hard to predict. We also dig into prevention you can actually act on, including hydration, wet food vs dry food, and when a urinary diet is worth it.
If you care for a cat or dog, listen now, share this with a fellow pet parent, and subscribe so you do not miss the next practical ER guide. After you listen, leave a review and tell us: what urinary warning sign surprised you most?
To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit:
https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com
Frisco Emergency Pet Care
11201 Preston Road
Frisco, Texas 75033
469-287-6767
By Dr. Mike LoSassoA cat that strains in the litter box and leaves nothing behind is not “being weird” that can be a clock-starting emergency. Julie Schwenzer and Dr. Mike LoSasso from Frisco Emergency Pet Care walk through urinary problems in dogs and cats with a clear focus on what becomes urgent, what can wait for a regular appointment, and what you should never ignore.
We talk about why female dogs and cats tend to get more urinary tract infections, what pet parents typically notice at home (frequent trips, accidents, blood in urine), and why quick testing matters. Then we shift to the scary cases: urinary obstruction. Dr. LoSasso explains how stones can lodge in the male dog urethra and why that can rapidly turn life-threatening as toxins and potassium build up when urine cannot leave the body.
Male cats get their own spotlight because their urethra narrows dramatically near the end, making them prone to “blocked tom” episodes from tiny stones or mucus plugs. We cover what emergency treatment usually involves (catheterization, IV fluids, electrolyte checks, multi-day hospitalization), why the bill can be a shock, and why recurrence is hard to predict. We also dig into prevention you can actually act on, including hydration, wet food vs dry food, and when a urinary diet is worth it.
If you care for a cat or dog, listen now, share this with a fellow pet parent, and subscribe so you do not miss the next practical ER guide. After you listen, leave a review and tell us: what urinary warning sign surprised you most?
To learn more about Frisco Emergency Pet Care visit:
https://www.FriscoEmergencyPetCare.com
Frisco Emergency Pet Care
11201 Preston Road
Frisco, Texas 75033
469-287-6767