⚠ Male Cat Blocked? This is an Emergency.

A male cat that is straining to urinate but producing no urine (or only a few drops) must be seen immediately. Urethral obstruction causes acute post-renal azotemia, hyperkalemia, and cardiac arrhythmias within 24-48 hours. Without relief, the cat will die. Do not delay — a blocked cat needs bladder drainage within hours, not days.

Overview

FLUTD is not a single disease — it is a clinical syndrome with multiple possible underlying causes. The causes in order of prevalence: Feline Idiopathic Cystitis (FIC) (~60-65% of cases) — sterile bladder inflammation of unknown cause; Urolithiasis (~15-20%) — mineral crystal aggregates (struvite or calcium oxalate) in the bladder or urethra; Urethral Plug (~10-15%) — matrix-crystalline obstruction at the urethral tip in male cats; Bacterial Urinary Tract Infection (~5-10%) — more common in older cats (>10 years) and those with diabetes or renal disease. FIC is a diagnosis of exclusion: no identifiable cause found after complete workup. The pathogenesis is complex — involving urothelial dysfunction, stress, and the neuroendocrine system. Multimodal environmental modification (MEMO) is the cornerstone of FIC management. Recurrence rate is high — up to 50% within 1-2 years without behavioral/environmental intervention.

Common Clinical Signs

Dysuria (straining to urinate — often 5+ minutes) Pollakiuria (frequent small amounts of urine) Hematuria (blood in urine — visible or microscopic) Urinating outside the litter box (often on smooth surfaces) Perineal licking Vocalizing during urination (pain) No urine production (obstruction — male cats) Vomiting and anorexia (post-renal azotemia from obstruction) Lethargy / hiding (stress/pain behavior)

Diagnostic Approach

Diagnostic Test Interpretation
Urinalysis (Cystocentesis) Hematuria (microscopic RBCs) in most FLUTD cases. Crystals: struvite or calcium oxalate — identify the stone type for dietary management. Pyuria (>5 WBCs/hpf) suggests UTI — submit for culture. Proteinuria on dipstick should be quantified with UPC. No significant bacteriuria in FIC by definition.
Urine Culture (Cystocentesis) Essential in cats >10 years, cats with diabetes or renal disease, or where infection is suspected. Culture before antibiotics if possible. Positive culture requires treatment with appropriate antibiotics based on AST.
Abdominal Ultrasound Bladder wall thickening (>3mm) consistent with cystitis. Uroliths visible as hyperechoic structures with acoustic shadowing. Sediment in the bladder (blood, crystals). Allows assessment without invasive procedures.
Survey Abdominal Radiographs Rocks: radiopaque stones (calcium oxalate) visible on plain films. Struvite stones are also radiopaque but may be smaller. ~85% of uroliths are radiopaque — radiographs are a useful first-line imaging tool.
CBC / Serum Chemistry For non-obstructed cats: usually normal. For obstructed cats: azotemia (elevated BUN, creatinine), hyperkalemia (can cause bradycardia — check ECG), metabolic acidosis. Monitor electrolytes q6-12h in obstructed patients.
Cystoscopy / Urethroscopy Rarely needed but can identify urethral strictures, polyps, or neoplasia. Requires general anesthesia and specialist equipment. Reserved for refractory cases or suspected neoplasia.

Differential Diagnoses

  • Bacterial urinary tract infection — The most important to rule out since it requires specific antibiotic treatment. Culture is the diagnostic test. More common in older cats and those with comorbidities (diabetes, CKD).
  • Urolithiasis (stones) — Struvite uroliths (dissolvable with acidifying diet) vs calcium oxalate (not dissolvable — require surgical removal or urohydropulsion). Urinalysis and imaging differentiate stone type.
  • Urethral Neoplasia — Transitional cell carcinoma (rare in cats) or polyps. Usually middle-aged to older cats with progressive obstruction. Ultrasound or contrast urethrography for diagnosis.
  • Renal failure (acute or chronic) — Azotemia without lower urinary tract signs (no dysuria). USG would be dilute in renal failure vs FIC where USG is often concentrated.

Treatment & Management

Obstructed male cats: Urinary catheterization under sedation/anaesthesia + continuous bladder drainage for 24-72 hours. IV fluid therapy to correct azotemia and electrolyte abnormalities. Analgesia (buprenorphine, fentanyl patch). Monitor potassium and renal values until normalized. Unobstructed FLUTD: Analgesia (NSAID if renal function normal, or buprenorphine). Antispasmodics (prazosin) to relax the urethral sphincter. FIC long-term management: Multimodal Environmental Modification (MEMO) is the single most effective intervention: multiple litter boxes in quiet locations, daily scooping, low-stress environment, Feliway (feline facial pheromone), enrichment (play, vertical space), canned urinary diet (increases water intake and dilutes urine). Dietary management with urinary-formula canned food is key.