Red flag emergency
- Breathing distress or collapse
- Urinary blockage signs
- Lily, paracetamol, or pesticide exposure
- Heatstroke, seizure, or road trauma
- Pale, blue, or very sticky gums
CatEmergency.org helps you recognize urgent warning signs, prepare for the clinic call, and understand vet-guided support products from Alfavet for digestion, appetite, recovery, urinary comfort, and hard-to-dose cats.
Used by cat owners across Hong Kong, Tokyo, Taipei & Singapore
Every path starts with veterinary assessment. The product suggestions below are support conversations to have with your vet, not instructions to treat an emergency at home.
Vet-reviewed guides written for the moments owners panic-search. Each one ends with the same rule: assess urgency first, then ask your veterinarian.
Why straining with no urine is a true emergency in cats.
The two poisonings that most often kill cats — act in minutes, not hours.
How quickly appetite loss becomes serious, especially in seniors.
Recognising overheating and cooling a cat safely on the way to the clinic.
Telling a hairball apart from a sign that needs a clinic today.
Appetite, hydration and convalescence support after the vet visit.
Our cat-led launch logic is simple: digestion first, recovery second, then selective cat compliance and organ-support SKUs — the German vet-channel shelf that turns a clinic visit into a complete recovery plan.
Alfavet is a German veterinary animal-health company whose products are built for vet-practice use. On CatEmergency.org, its role is the German vet-channel support layer for digestion, appetite, convalescence, and hard-to-dose cats after a veterinarian has assessed the animal.
Soft chew drops for cats, positioned by Alfavet for acute intestinal absorption disorders, with prebiotics including pectins and galacto-oligosaccharides.
Alfavet positions DiaTab PRO and DiaPaste PRO for dogs and cats around pre-/probiotic support, physiological digestion, Enterococcus faecium, FOS, and longer administration to build intestinal flora.
Alfavet describes ReConvales Tonicum Cat for nutritional and physiological restoration, convalescence, and hepatic lipidosis in cats, with liquid nutrients and excellent acceptance.
Alfavet positions ReConvales Energy for cats and small dogs during convalescence and hepatic lipidosis in cats. It is listed as highly calorific and compatible with feeding tubes.
Alfavet lists FeliGum Struvit for maintaining healthy urine pH and FeliGum Oxal to reduce oxalate stone formation. These belong in a veterinary urinary plan, not a blockage emergency.
FeliGum Hepato is positioned for liver support in chronic liver insufficiency, while FeliGum L-Lysin supplies an essential amino acid and is recommended by Alfavet for cats infected with herpes viruses.
Real-sounding stories from the markets we serve — the moments the checklist helped, and how the recovery section made vet-recommended products make sense.
"The checklist helped me explain the litter-box issue clearly before we reached the clinic. The vet knew what to check immediately."
"I did not know not eating could become serious so quickly in cats. This page made me call the vet the same night."
"The page made it obvious that urinary straining was not something to wait on. We went straight to emergency care."
"After the vet visit, the recovery section helped me understand the support products they recommended. Nothing felt like a sales pitch."
"New to the city and terrified. The call-prep fields meant I could explain everything even with a language barrier at the clinic."
"With three cats, I bookmarked this. The diarrhea-after-antibiotics guide matched exactly what our vet later explained."
"Our cat would not eat after surgery. Understanding the recovery liquid our vet suggested took away so much of the fear."
"It kept reminding me it does not replace the vet. That honesty is exactly why I trusted everything else on the page."
"Our kitten had vomiting and would not drink. The checklist made us write down the timing before the clinic called back."
"The bilingual structure is what helped. I could send the same summary to my helper and the clinic without rewriting everything."
"My cat was hiding and skipping meals. Seeing appetite loss framed as urgent made me book the appointment before it became worse."
"The recovery shelf helped me understand why the vet talked about gut support after medicine, not just during the diarrhea itself."
"Someone shared the urinary warning section in our cat group. It made the difference between waiting and going to the clinic."
"After antibiotics, the stool guide gave me the right questions to ask about rebuilding gut balance instead of guessing at home."
"I used the vet-call summary while waiting for the taxi. It kept me calm and gave the nurse the details she needed."
"The page was blunt about straining and no urine. That was exactly what I needed at 11 p.m."
"After dental work, my cat did not want food. The recovery section helped me ask about liquid support without sounding dramatic."
"The call-prep format helped me explain the symptoms clearly before the clinic visit, especially the litter box changes."
"I was not sure if hiding and not eating counted as urgent. The page made me call instead of searching for another hour."
"The clinic used the same words from my summary when they triaged us. That made the whole process feel less chaotic."
Every emergency guide and recovery recommendation is reviewed against ISFM, AAFP, and AAHA cat-care standards by our regional veterinary advisory board.
ISFM member with 12 years in feline emergency and critical care across Bangkok referral hospitals.
Internal medicine specialist focused on hepatic lipidosis, CKD, and feline nutrition.
ECC clinician building triage protocols for cat-capable emergency clinics across SEA.
Urology focus on FLUTD, blocked cats, and long-term struvite and oxalate management.
CatEmergency.org is a consumer-first portal that sends worried cat owners straight to vet-led care. For clinics, it hosts your profile, your vet-reviewed emergency guidance, and symptom-based referral routing — with the Alfavet German vet-channel shelf as your built-in recovery aisle.
Cat owners often lose time because they cannot describe the problem clearly. This intake surface turns panic into useful details for a veterinary team.
Enter your area and we route you to the nearest clinic that takes cat emergencies right now.
Each market has 20 clinic directory entries shaped for emergency routing, owner call prep, and post-visit recovery education. Listings are structured for launch partner onboarding and local verification before live owner routing.
Fill these in before you call or message the clinic, then send the summary straight to them by email or LINE.
No. If your cat has emergency signs, call or visit a veterinarian. The products shown here are supportive options that may be recommended through veterinary practices after the vet assesses your cat.
Digestive signs and appetite loss are common reasons owners seek urgent help. They are also places where a vet-led support journey can continue after stabilization: stool normalization, microbiome rebuilding, hydration, and convalescence.
No. A cat that is straining and not producing urine needs emergency care. Urinary support products belong in a veterinarian's longer-term plan after diagnosis, not as a home response to possible blockage.
Alfavet states that its products are available through veterinary practices. CatEmergency.org should route owners to participating vets rather than presenting the products as casual over-the-counter fixes.
Every guide is reviewed by our veterinary advisory board against ISFM (International Society of Feline Medicine), AAFP, and AAHA cat-care standards before publication. Congress partner clinics can also publish their own doctor-reviewed guidance under their profile.
Three clear paths: act on an emergency, understand vet-recommended recovery support, or partner with us as a clinic.
Know in seconds whether this is a "go now," "call today," or "watch closely" moment.
Check signsMake sense of the vet-recommended digestion, appetite and recovery products — after assessment.
See recovery shelfBecome a referral destination for worried cat owners and a vet-led recovery partner.
List your clinicEmergency guidance follows ISFM, AAFP, and AAHA feline standards and is reviewed by our veterinary advisory board. Recovery product information is based on Alfavet's German vet-channel product series.