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Chronic Kidney Disease in Cats: Early Detection and Long-Term Management

Daniel 31 Mar 2026 2 min read 117 views 0 comments

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is one of the most common serious conditions affecting older cats. It is estimated to affect up to 30 to 40 percent of cats over 10 years of age, and as cats increasingly live well into their teens, understanding this disease has become essential for any cat owner.

Why Cats Are Particularly Vulnerable

Cats are particularly susceptible to CKD for several reasons, including their carnivorous physiology, which places high demands on the kidneys to process protein waste, and their tendency not to drink sufficient water when fed predominantly dry food. The kidneys have tremendous reserve capacity — clinical signs typically do not appear until 65 to 75 percent of kidney function is already lost. This is why regular veterinary blood and urine testing, rather than waiting for symptoms, is the key to early detection.

Early Warning Signs to Watch For

When signs do appear, they include increased thirst and urination; weight loss despite a reasonable appetite; reduced appetite over time; lethargy; coat quality changes; occasional vomiting; and bad breath with an ammonia-like smell caused by accumulation of urinary waste products in the blood. In later stages, mouth ulcers, severe anaemia and profound inappetence become apparent. Any of these signs in a cat over seven years warrants a prompt veterinary visit.

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Diagnosis and Staging

Diagnosis involves blood tests measuring creatinine, urea and SDMA — a sensitive early marker of kidney dysfunction that can detect disease significantly earlier than creatinine alone — plus urine specific gravity, urine protein-to-creatinine ratio and blood pressure. The IRIS staging system divides CKD into four stages based on these parameters, each associated with different prognosis and management priorities. Many vets now include SDMA in routine senior blood panels for cats over seven years, giving owners and vets more time to intervene before irreversible damage accumulates.

Long-Term Management at Home

CKD cannot be cured, but it can be managed very effectively. The cornerstones of management include a phosphorus-restricted prescription kidney diet (Royal Canin Renal, Hill's k/d and Purina NF are the main evidence-based options available globally), increased water intake through wet food and water fountains, and regular veterinary monitoring every three to six months. Additional interventions may include phosphate binders, antihypertensive medication, appetite stimulants, anti-nausea medications and subcutaneous fluid therapy — which many owners learn to administer at home, providing a hydration top-up that significantly improves quality of life. A cat diagnosed at Stage 1 or 2 CKD with appropriate management can live comfortably for years.

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