Originally, the word cat plague has been almost forgotten by people. Unexpectedly, the cat plague epidemic has gradually broken out in Taiwan in recent years, which has made many owners face this terrible cat disease again. But prevention is better than treatment, so let the editor help you all see this enemy named "Cat Plague" well and fight it back.
【Reveal the mystery of cat plague】:
Feline distemper is actually the common name of "Feline panleukopenia" and "Feline infected enteritis". It is a viral disease caused by "feet small virus". It has a very high mortality rate and is the number one enemy of Meow Meow and its owner. This cat microvirus will inhibit the hematopoietic cells in the bone marrow, causing the number of leukocytes to drop sharply, and eventually die due to dehydration and excessive blood loss caused by insufficient leukocytes and hemorrhagic enteritis. Cat plague is very common in feline animals and can be transmitted to all animals of the feline and raccoon family. It is highly contagious and its combat power cannot be underestimated.
[Attack strategy for cat plague]:
Generally, it is mainly caused by contact infection, and it can also be infected through blood-sucking insects or fleas, or through contact with a contaminated environment. Cat plague is mainly active in wild cats and kittens that have not received the vaccine. Through contact between cats and contact with the contaminated environment, cats are infected with cats. If the environment is contaminated by cats, the infectivity of the virus can last for several years. The source of infection mainly comes from excrement, saliva and vomit from meow during the acute infection period. Although cat plague is common in Xiao Miaomiao, meows of other age groups are also very dangerous, especially the production season of meows is the peak of infection.
Although the mortality rate of cat plague is extremely high, it is still possible to survive. After recovering, the sick meow will still remove the toxins in the body by excreting feces and urine, which usually takes several months; however, the feces and urine excreted by the meow after recovery in these months are extremely contagious and can easily cause other uninfected meows to get sick and even pollute the local environment.