If a cat catches a cold, if the symptoms are mild and has strong resistance, it can heal itself. It can usually recover in 3 to 7 days. If the cat does not improve for more than 5 days, it needs to be treated in time; cats with poor resistance (kittens or elderly cats) have low chance of self-healing when they catch a cold, and it needs timely intervention and treatment. Whether a cat can heal itself depends on the virulence of the pathogen and the body's resistance. Cats have a common cold. If their body has strong resistance, they may recover by themselves.
Cats usually have colds, sneezing, runny nose, body temperature rise, eye secretions and nasal secretions. Mild symptoms may only show cats sneezing, small amounts of snot, and poor mental state.
The symptoms of colds caused by non-infectious causes are generally mild. Cats can recover their health through resistance by keeping warm and supplementing nutrition (respiratory prescription cream). They can generally recover in 3-7 days, but if the symptoms last for more than 5 days and the symptoms are even serious, it is recommended to go to the pet hospital for a test to check whether they are infected with the virus.
The cold symptoms caused by infectious causes are usually more severe, and may occur sneezing, runny nose, elevated body temperature, conjunctivitis, and purulent secretions in the nasal cavity (yellow). The owner takes the cat to a pet hospital for a "four respiratory nucleic acid five-joint test", which can detect several pathogens at the same time, which is convenient for the treatment of the cause and the use of symptomatic medication. For viruses, drugs such as famciclovir and interferon will be used, and antibiotics (most commonly used by SNO and Mobixin) will be used to prevent secondary infections. If you have eye inflammation, you need to use pet-specific anti-inflammatory eye drops (fluthofacin, etc.). Respiratory tract conditioning may also use cough and asthma and respiratory prescription cream to help relieve symptoms.
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