The feline nasal branch and herpes virus are relatively difficult diseases to treat for cats. They are diseases that affect the trachea and conjunctiva, and the similarity is very high. However, parents still need to know what the difference is, so as not to be ineffective because of non-symptomatic treatment.
The feline herpes virus enters the cat's body through the mouth, nose, conjunctiva, etc., and then causes a lytic infection of the nasal mucosa epithelial cells, and then spreads to the conjunctiva. , throat, trachea, bronchi and small bronchi, the lesions are local multiple necrotizing and inflammatory lesions. The full name of feline nasal bronchitis should be feline nasal bronchitis. The typical symptoms are mainly caused by virus-induced cat respiratory tract infection, such as frequent sneezing, runny nose, coughing, fever, poor cat spirit, and not eating. , Since the virus invades the cat's eye conjunctiva, there is also a feature that the sick cat will have tears leading to purulent secretions, conjunctival edema, and severe corneal ulcers or even blindness in cats.
The initial symptoms of feline nasal branch are relatively mild, and they are often misdiagnosed as cat cold. The symptoms are mostly sneezing, watery eyes, and runny nose. For inflammation in the body, we can use oral amoxicillin for children to treat it with less side effects. If the cat's nasal branch is severe, symptoms such as rhinitis, conjunctivitis, etc. will continue to appear. In addition to taking amoxicillin, eye drops with anti-inflammatory and anti-viral functions should be added.
Finally, if a cat is infected with the virus once, it will carry it for life, so treatment is more than prevention. If the cat has not been hit with the cat triple, remember to hit the cat over the age of three months to reduce the infection rate of the cat's nasal branch.