Cats Eyes Dilated After Anesthesia
Feline dilated pupil syndrome or Key-Gaskell syndrome.
Cats eyes dilated after anesthesia. Hypotension hypothermia and hyperthermia are three of the most commonly observed complications in cats following anesthesia. Diseases can be found within the iris tissue and scar tissue can build up in the eye resulting in anisocoria. I am a subscriber of VETINFO and enjoy it very much.
My cats after anesthesia. If your cat is on medication and has dilated pupils contact your veterinary surgery who will be able to advise if this is a common side effect. There may be shivering or trembling.
This may worry the cats owner because anesthetics can harm or rarely even kill a cat. The normal healthy cat was groggy and sickly acting. Each of these parameters should be assessed every 5-15 minutes for the duration of anesthesia.
3232013 A cat might have dilated eyes after a general anesthetic. If your pet is a cat let the cat come out of the carrier on her own. If the cat was truly normal for the two days after the anesthesiayour vets will probably start looking for infectious type problems that would take advantage of the suppressed immune system during anesthesia.
Withhold food and water for the first few hours after bringing your cat home. I am currently fostering a 4-month-old litter of 4 kittens for a local humane society. You may see dilated pupils unsteadiness or lethargy lack of appetite moodiness or appearance of drunkenness.
Merritt left the angry drunk and Gabby right the happy drunk. The pupil constricts or dilates enlarges according to the amount of light that enters the eyes with both pupils normally dilating in dim light and constricting in bright light. After all she was fasted since the previous night.