Cat poop triage
Cat poop with blood: litter tray safety check
Blood in a cat's stool can be hard to judge because litter changes what you see. The important context is appetite, energy, repeated episodes, stool texture, and whether your cat is urinating normally.
What to check in the litter tray
- Look for red streaks, dark stool, mucus, watery stool, or repeated trips to the tray.
- Check appetite, hiding, energy, drinking, and signs of pain.
- Confirm whether your cat is urinating normally, not just visiting the litter tray.
Cat red flags
- Emergency vet now if your cat cannot urinate or strains repeatedly in the tray.
- Emergency vet now for collapse, severe lethargy, pale gums, or suspected toxin exposure.
- Call a vet today for repeated blood, diarrhea, vomiting, or not eating.
What PawVerity gives you
PawVerity can keep the photo, owner answers, AI visual notes, and follow-up trend together for your clinic.
PawVerity is not a diagnosis and does not replace a physical veterinary examination. It is a structured triage and evidence tool for Australian pet owners.