
Research is the key.
Since our inception in 1968, EveryCat has been focused solely on science- and medicine-based research for improving feline health.
Preventing life-threatening diseases. Advancing feline medical treatment. Promoting the human-animal bond so cats live longer, healthier lives. Research funded by EveryCat Health Foundation has an impact on cats, cat owners, cat fanciers, veterinarians, and researchers every day.
Since our inception in 1968, EveryCat has been focused solely on science- and medicine-based research for improving feline health.
With the support of thousands of generous donors, we’ve been able to award more than $8 million to directly fund cat health research. Without donor support, much of the work that talented researchers around the world pursue simply would not be possible.
EveryCat-supported health studies have helped veterinarians improve the diagnosis and treatment of many diseases and conditions, changing the way feline medicine is practiced. And we continually advance knowledge around feline health through numerous educational resources and events for professionals and cat owners.
In the 1960s, feline red blood cells were first recognized as belonging to at least two distinct groups, and the AB blood group system was named. However, it was not until 80s that significant investigation into feline blood types was carried out, and the importance of blood type in transfusion reactions and hemolytic disease of newborns (neonatal isoerythrolysis, also known as “fading kitten syndrome”) was recognized.
Urs Giger, PhD, DrMedVet, MS, FHV, DECVIM, DACVIM, and his colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania were the first to conduct surveys of feline blood types in the United States. They discovered that blood type A is the most prevalent, with the important exception of certain pedigreed breeds, such as Devon Rex and British Shorthair, which have an increased percentage with blood type B. Dr. Giger also determined the inheritance pattern of feline blood groups and the mechanism of neonatal isoerythrolysis, making it possible to avoid fading kitten syndrome in at-risk newborn kittens.
More than 20 years later, veterinarians and cat breeders have a better understanding of feline blood types and know how to avoid potentially fatal transfusion reactions and neonatal isoerythrolysis, which results when nursing kittens have type A blood and the queen has type B blood. This scenario can occur when a tomcat with type A blood mates with a queen with type B blood, producing some kittens with type A blood.
Examples of lentiviruses — such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) — were well known in primates, but the existence of a lentivirus that infects cats was not discovered until the mid-1980s. At that time, Niels Pedersen, DVM, PhD, Janet Yamamoto, PhD, and their colleagues at the University of California, Davis, identified a “T-lymphotrophic virus” in a cattery in California that caused an immunodeficiency-like syndrome. The discovery was published in the February 1987 issue of the premier journal Science.
Later renamed feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), it is now known as an important cause of illness in cats, with a worldwide distribution. Rapid in-clinic test kits to diagnose FIV infection are now commonly used. Immunologist Yamamoto was also instrumental in the development of the first FIV vaccine, released in 2002.
While it has long been known that taurine is an essential amino acid in the feline diet and that deficiency can lead to blindness from retinal damage, the role of taurine in heart disease was not discovered until the 1980s. At that time, thousands of cats died every year from dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a disease characterized by an enlarged heart with poor muscle contractions.
A team of researchers at the University of California, Davis, led by Paul Pion, DVM, DACVIM, discovered that most cases of DCM in cats were related to taurine-deficient diets. The initial research was published in the August 1987 issue of Science. More published research followed that confirmed the original hypothesis, and eventually led to an increase in the amount of taurine pet food manufacturers incorporate into feline diets. Today, DCM has thankfully become a rare disease and the lives of many cats have been spared.
While non-invasive measurement of arterial blood pressure in cats was first described in the veterinary literature in the 1970s, it remained primarily a research tool and was not commonly used in clinical practice. In the late 1980s, interest in measuring feline blood pressure increased as associations between high blood pressure (hypertension) and both heart disease and kidney disease were recognized.
Philip Fox, DVM, MSc, DACVIM, DECVIM, DACVECC, of the Animal Medical Center in New York showed in 1988 that blood pressure could easily be measured in cats with the correct blood pressure cuff sizes. Today, high blood pressure is diagnosed in about 20% of cats with chronic kidney disease using readily available equipment. Cats undergoing anesthesia also have their blood pressure monitored. Identification and treatment of hypertension in cats helps avoid serious consequences, such as loss of vision or stroke- like events. The lives of countless senior cats have been improved and extended by management of high blood pressure.
Identified in 1964, feline leukemia virus (FeLV) is now known to be one of the most important infectious causes of illness in cats worldwide. Since the 1960s, a great deal has been learned about the transmission of FeLV and the importance of testing to identify infected cats.
EveryCat-funded researchers helped develop in-clinic tests that enable veterinarians to screen cats for FeLV in minutes. Testing and identification of infected cats is the cornerstone of disease control, and has enabled multi-cat facilities to remain FeLV-free.
The traditional age to spay and neuter (“alter”) cats is about six months of age, although it may be as late as one year of age in some countries. Unfortunately, many cats have at least one litter of kittens before they are altered, thereby contributing to the serious problem of homeless pets.
In the early 1990s, Mark Bloomberg, DVM, MS, DACVS, and W. Preston Stubbs, DVM, DACVS, at the University of Florida, conducted the first health and behavior studies on kittens altered at seven weeks of age and compared them to kittens altered at seven months of age. Their work proved that earlier spay/neuter was safe and feasible, and formed the basis for further research that established the best anesthetic and surgical protocols for early-age altering. Since these first studies were published, other short- term and long-term studies have validated the safety of early-age altering, and have given shelters another tool to fight the needless deaths of homeless pets.
In 2000, David Twedt, DVM, DACVIM, and his colleagues at Colorado State University reported on serious inflammation and scarring of the esophagus of cats associated with oral administration of the antibiotic doxycycline in tablet or capsule form. Dr. Twedt’s research confirmed that tablets or capsules given to cats may remain in the esophagus for more than five minutes — long enough for certain drugs such as doxycycline and clindamycin to cause esophageal damage.
The simple act of giving a cat a drink of water or a small treat immediately after the pill or capsule to induce swallowing effectively ensures the medication reaches the stomach without lingering in the esophagus. These findings have changed the way oral tablets and capsules are given to cats and have increased the desire of veterinarians and cat owners to find safer and more palatable ways of medicating cats.
Diabetes mellitus, a commonly diagnosed disease in cats, results when the pancreas does not produce sufficient insulin to properly convert glucose to energy, or when the body is resistant to the effects of insulin. For many years, the prevailing wisdom regarding nutrition for diabetic cats centered on the use of high-fiber diets, which are prescribed for human and dogs with the disease, because fiber has been shown to minimize the impact of dietary carbohydrates on blood sugar. But researchers began to suspect that since cats are obligate carnivores, a low-carbohydrate/high protein diet might be another approach for controlling diabetes in cats.
In 2003, Deborah Greco, DVM, PhD, DACVIM, and her colleagues at Colorado State University found that for some diabetic cats, the high-protein diet could be an effective alternative. Studies using a canned high-protein/low-carbohydrate food, with and without the starch blocker acarbose, found the diet enabled many cats to discontinue insulin injections. Those who still needed insulin required a much lower dose. The use of high- protein/low carbohydrate diets represents one of the most important recent advances in treating diabetes in cats.
Feline asthma is a common cause of lower respiratory tract disease. It can range from mild with intermittent signs to very severe with life-threatening consequences. Therapy for feline asthma has traditionally been based on oral bronchodilators and corticosteroids, as well as injectable corticosteroids. These medications sometimes have serious side effects. In addition, some owners find it quite difficult to administer oral medications to their cat. This results in inadequate dosing of medication and poor control of the asthma.
As with humans, the use of metered dose inhalers in cats instead of oral or injectable medications reduces the risk of side effects, improves disease control, and provides a quick way to give medication in an emergency. However, the efficacy of aerosolized medications in cats was not verified until 2004, when Rhonda Schulman, DVM, DACVIM, and her colleagues at the University of Illinois, Urbana, found that medication was indeed delivered to the lower airways in therapeutic doses. Their work revolutionized treatment, and today, many asthmatic cats are medicated at home with metered dose inhalers using a facemask and spacer system designed specifically for cats.
Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is one of the most common inherited diseases in humans. It was first identified in Persian cats in the 1980s. David Biller, DVM, DACVR, of Kansas State University and Leslie Lyons, PhD, of the University of California, Davis, identified feline PKD as an autosomal dominant genetic trait. Their work described the pathology associated with the defect and enabled affected cats to be detected using ultrasound imaging of the kidneys. It soon became apparent that the disease, which can cause chronic kidney failure, affected a large percentage of certain breeds.
In 2004, Dr. Lyons and her colleagues identified a mutation in the feline PKD1 gene associated with the disease in cats. Although the mutation can be found in any cat breed, the prevalence is considerably higher in Persian and Persian-related cats, affecting approximately 38% of Persian cats in the U.S. A DNA test is now available using a simple cheek swab that enables breeders to reduce the prevalence of the genetic mutation over time and produce kittens free of PKD.
Cardiomyopathy means disease of the heart muscle, and today, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common heart disease seen in cats of all types. Many cats live normal lives with HCM, but others will suffer devastating consequences such as heart failure, thromboembolism and sudden death. From the experiences of breeders and owners of many pedigreed cat breeds, it was suspected that HCM is inherited in cats, as it often is in people.
Mark Kittleson, DVM, PhD, DACVIM, and his colleagues at the University of California, Davis, determined that HCM is an autosomal dominant inherited disease in Maine Coon Cats, and established guidelines for diagnosis of HCM using ultrasound imaging of the heart. In 2004, Kathryn Meurs, DVM, PhD, DACVIM, and her colleagues at Washington State University, along with Dr. Kittleson and his colleagues, discovered the first genetic mutation causing HCM in Maine Coon Cats. In 2007, Dr. Meurs and her team discovered a different mutation causing HCM in Ragdoll cats. A simple DNA test using cheek swab is now available for both breeds.
Research in other cat breeds is ongoing because, as with human HCM, it appears many different mutations may lead to feline HCM. Finding the genetic mutations that cause disease may one day open the door to improved treatments for cats with HCM.
One of the most enigmatic and heart-breaking diseases affecting cats, especially kittens, is feline infectious peritonitis (FIP). Although a form of coronavirus causes it, FIP defies the rules normally ascribed to infectious diseases.
EveryCat-funded research since the early 1990s has been the basis of many of the important discoveries about the natural biology and pathology of feline coronavirus. Although definitive tests and effective treatments are still lacking, veterinarians now have a better understanding of how to diagnose and manage FIP in multi-cat environments. EveryCat has funded the best researchers and the most inventive coronavirus projects at institutions around the world, including the University of California, the University of Tennessee, Cornell University, the University of Milan, the University of Edinburgh, the University of Zurich, and Utrecht University.
Through the Bria Fund for FIP research, established in 2005, EveryCat is committed to future efforts to fully unravel the puzzle of FIP.