What Is FLUTD (Feline Lower Urinary Tract Disease)?
📖 Definition
FLUTD is an umbrella term for conditions affecting the bladder and urethra of cats, including feline idiopathic cystitis (FIC), urinary crystals and stones, urinary tract infections, and urethral plugs. The most common cause is FIC (stress-triggered inflammation). The most dangerous complication is urethral obstruction in male cats — a life-threatening emergency that can kill within 24–48 hours.
The term FLUTD groups several distinct conditions that share similar clinical signs — frequent urination attempts, straining, blood in urine, urinating outside the litter box, and crying during urination. Because the management of each underlying cause differs significantly, a proper diagnosis rather than assuming a cause is essential. Urinalysis, urine culture, imaging, and physical examination guide the workup.
FIC (feline idiopathic cystitis) accounts for 65% or more of FLUTD cases. It is caused by stress-triggered neurogenic inflammation of the bladder wall and has no bacterial component — antibiotics are inappropriate and ineffective. Urinary crystals and stones (most commonly struvite or calcium oxalate) are another significant cause. Urinary tract infection (bacterial) is actually uncommon in cats under 10 years of age and more common in diabetic, immunosuppressed, or older cats.
Urethral obstruction — complete blockage of the urethra — is the most urgent FLUTD complication and affects almost exclusively male cats due to their longer, narrower urethra. A male cat that is straining repeatedly in the litter box without producing any urine must be seen by a vet within hours, not the next morning. Blockage causes toxin build-up, electrolyte imbalances, and cardiac arrest without emergency treatment.
Emergency: Male cat straining with no urine output = urethral blockage
Antibiotics appropriate for? Bacterial UTI only — not FIC (the most common form)
Frequently Asked Questions about FLUTD (Feline Lower Urinary Tract Disease)
Q: My cat is visiting the litter box constantly but only producing small amounts — what is happening?
This is a classic FLUTD presentation. In a female cat or neutered male, it is likely FIC or crystals and is concerning but not immediately life-threatening — see a vet within 24 hours. In an intact or recently neutered male producing no urine at all, this is a urological emergency — go to an emergency vet now.
Q: Will my cat with FLUTD need surgery?
It depends on the cause. FIC is managed medically and through lifestyle/stress modification. Struvite crystals and stones can often be dissolved with prescription diet. Calcium oxalate stones require surgical removal. Urethral plugs require emergency deobstruction under anaesthesia. Not all FLUTD cases require surgery.
Q: Can diet prevent FLUTD?
Diet plays a significant role. Wet food significantly increases urinary water content and dilutes urine, reducing crystal formation and possibly reducing FIC flares (since increased water consumption from wet food is beneficial). Prescription urinary diets maintain urine at a pH that prevents crystal formation. For FIC specifically, stress reduction is as important as any dietary change.
⚠ Medical Disclaimer: This glossary entry is for educational purposes only
and does not constitute veterinary advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for diagnosis
and treatment of your pet's health conditions.