Cats with hematuria and frequent urination but not much urination may be caused by too little water intake, which leads to excessive urine concentration and blocked urinary tracts. This may lead to hematuria, frequent urination but not much urination. You can guide the cat to drink more water or feed wet food to help the cat replenish more water.
It may also be caused by urinary problems, such as urinary stones. , cystitis, etc. If you don’t know what’s causing the cat, you can observe it by feeding Meow Lushun, or take the cat to a pet hospital for biochemical tests, especially in terms of kidney function. Check whether there is complete anuria and inability to urinate. If the cat can still urinate, it is usually necessary to wear an Elizabethan ring on the cat to avoid licking the urethral opening, and then give oral medications to repair the bladder mucosa and urethral mucosa.
Besides, the most important thing is to give Cats are given some subcutaneous fluid or intravenous fluid to increase the body's metabolism and produce more urine. If it is not convenient to seek medical infusion treatment, you can also take oral medicine at home and give water with a syringe for treatment. Generally, owners can give water orally at 40ml per kilogram of body weight per day at home to increase the cat's water intake and promote urination. Generally, this type of disease mostly occurs in male cats between 1 and 4 years old.