Artrite em Gatos: A Dor Oculta
Até 90% dos gatos com mais de 12 anos têm artrite, mas a maioria não é diagnosticada. Saiba os sinais subtis e tratamentos modernos.
Arthritis (osteoarthritis) is one of the most underdiagnosed conditions in cats. Studies show that up to 90% of cats over age 12 and 60% of cats over age 6 have radiographic evidence of arthritis. Because cats are masters at hiding pain and rarely limp visibly, most owners don't realize their cat is suffering. Recognizing the subtle signs and seeking treatment can dramatically improve your cat's quality of life.
Key Points
- Up to 90% of senior cats have arthritis — it is massively underdiagnosed
- Cats rarely limp — instead they reduce activity, avoid jumping, or change behavior
- Signs include reluctance to jump up/down, using stairs less, decreased grooming, and hiding
- Anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs) approved for cats can significantly improve comfort
- Environmental modifications — ramps, heated beds, low-entry litter boxes — make a big difference
- Solensia (frunevetmab) is a new monthly injection specifically for feline arthritis pain
Why Cats Hide Arthritis Pain
In the wild, showing pain makes cats vulnerable to predators. This survival instinct means domestic cats rarely show obvious lameness. Instead, they compensate by jumping less, avoiding stairs, sleeping more, and reducing grooming (especially on the hind end). Many owners attribute these changes to "getting old" when they actually indicate chronic pain requiring treatment.
Recognizing the Signs
Key signs to watch for: your cat hesitates before jumping or uses intermediate steps (chair → counter instead of floor → counter), has matted fur on the back or hind legs (reduced grooming), avoids the litter box because the sides are too high to step over, becomes less social or hides more, shows irritability when touched in certain areas, or has stiff movements after resting.
Treatment Options
Treatment is multimodal: pain medication (meloxicam/NSAIDs for cats with kidney monitoring, or the newer Solensia monthly injection), joint supplements (omega-3 fatty acids, glucosamine), weight management (even 5% weight loss reduces joint stress), physical therapy (gentle range-of-motion exercises, laser therapy), and environmental modifications. Solensia (frunevetmab) is a breakthrough — a monthly injection that blocks nerve growth factor, providing significant pain relief without daily medication.
Home Modifications
Small changes make a big difference for arthritic cats: provide pet stairs or ramps to favorite perches, use low-entry litter boxes (cut down the front of a storage bin), place heated beds in favorite sleeping spots (warmth soothes stiff joints), add non-slip mats on slippery floors, and ensure food/water are on the same level as where your cat spends most time. These modifications allow your cat to maintain independence and dignity.
When to See a Vet Immediately
- Your senior cat has stopped jumping to favorite high spots
- Your cat's grooming has decreased, especially on the back or hind legs
- Your cat is having accidents outside the litter box or avoiding it
- Your cat seems less social, hides more, or is more irritable than usual
- Your cat has stiff movements after resting that improve with activity
- You want to discuss pain management options for your aging cat
How RVC Can Help
Royal Veterinary Center specializes in feline arthritis management. We offer diagnostic X-rays, Solensia injections (monthly feline arthritis treatment), anti-inflammatory medications with kidney monitoring, therapeutic laser sessions, and home modification consultations. Don't let your cat suffer in silence — a simple assessment can reveal treatable pain. Call +853 6677 6611.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional veterinary advice. If your pet is showing any symptoms, please contact Royal Veterinary Center immediately at +853 6677 6611.