What are the symptoms of feline panleukopenia?
Feline panleukopenia, also known as feline infectious enteritis or feline distemper, is an acute and fatal infectious disease caused by feline parvovirus.
Feline panleukopenia, also known as feline infectious enteritis or feline distemper, is an acute and fatal infectious disease caused by feline parvovirus.
Canine infectious hepatitis is an acute septicemic infectious disease in canines caused by canine adenovirus type I. The main clinical manifestations are hepatitis and corneal opacification (ie, blue eye disease).
Toxoplasmosis is a zoonotic disease caused by Toxoplasma gondii and can infect almost all warm-blooded animals.
Occult blood in the stool may indicate coloncancer or #polyps in the colon or rectum — though not all cancers or polyps bleed.
Canine adenovirus type II can cause infectious laryngotracheitis and pneumonia symptoms in dogs . Clinical features include persistent high fever , cough , serous to mucoid rhinorrhea, tonsillitis, laryngotracheitis, and pneumonia.
Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) is a chronic , progressive , and fatal infectious disease caused by feline infectious peritonitis virus.
Canine parainfluenza is a viral infectious disease that mainly affects the respiratory tract of dogs, usually causing symptoms such as coughing, runny nose, and fever.
Cats infected with the herpes virus will develop symptoms such as listlessness, loss of appetite, increased secretions from the eyes, nose and mouth, and ulcers.
Dog feces contains a small amount of blood cells or hemoglobin that cannot be directly observed with the naked eye, but can be detected using chemical methods.
Pancreatitis in cats usually develops rapidly, and common symptoms include lethargy, loss of appetite, vomiting, and dehydration.