minniecarousel
Chris Isaak fan
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2000
- Messages
- 13,924
My son & DIL's cat started to drool last evening. In fact, she was drooling so much, they took her to the emergency Vet. The Vet saw nothing on exam, but did some blood work, which didn't show anything alarming. Upset stomach?
To complicate things, they went out of town for a couple of nights. So I went and checked on her and she was fine. There was a little drool on the arm of the coach, where she was sitting when I walked in. But her little paws, neck and chin were completely dry. They were surprised when I called and told them that. (Apparently, she was really gushing last night.)
What would cause a cat to suddenly start drooling like that? She is around 3 years old. (The Vet said as long as she's eating & drinking, not to worry.)
To complicate things, they went out of town for a couple of nights. So I went and checked on her and she was fine. There was a little drool on the arm of the coach, where she was sitting when I walked in. But her little paws, neck and chin were completely dry. They were surprised when I called and told them that. (Apparently, she was really gushing last night.)
What would cause a cat to suddenly start drooling like that? She is around 3 years old. (The Vet said as long as she's eating & drinking, not to worry.)
) and he turned out to have tonsillitis -- poor guy! The vet said they can also do it if they have stomach issues or something stuck/caught in their mouth/throat/teeth. The only thing that could really be serious is the "stuck stuff" scenario.... you should make sure somebody has examined the inside of the cat's mouth (with a flashlight!) really really carefully to rule that out.