Cat vomit triage
Cat vomit or hairball check
Cats can vomit from hairballs, food changes, stress, toxins, or illness. PawVerity helps you collect the context and avoid treating repeated vomiting as just a hairball.
What to check with cat vomit
- Separate a likely hairball from repeated vomiting, food vomit, bile, foam, or blood.
- Track appetite, drinking, hiding, energy, and whether vomiting happens more than once.
- Note any plant, toxin, string, toy, medication, or foreign object exposure.
Cat vomit red flags
- Emergency vet now for repeated vomiting with weakness, collapse, breathing trouble, or pale gums.
- Emergency vet now if your cat cannot keep water down or toxin exposure is possible.
- Contact a vet today if vomiting repeats, appetite drops, or your cat seems unusually quiet.
What PawVerity gives you
The 48-hour case includes your initial report, one follow-up check, and a final trend summary so you can explain what changed over time.
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.