Yes, cats can develop stomach or intestinal sores when the lining breaks down, sometimes tied to meds, toxins, or other illness.
A cat ulcer is an open sore in the stomach or upper small intestine. It forms when the normal lining can’t shield tissue from acid and digestive juices. Some cats look clearly unwell. Others seem “off” until bleeding or pain builds.
Below you’ll get the signs that raise concern, the causes vets look for, how ulcers are confirmed, and how to keep your cat safer while you arrange care.
What An Ulcer Is And Why Cats Get Them
The stomach and upper intestine have a slick barrier that keeps acid where it belongs. When that barrier thins or tears, acid and enzymes irritate the raw tissue beneath. With time, that irritation can turn into a sore.
In cats, true ulcers are less routine than a mild upset stomach. When they show up, there’s usually a driver behind them. The Merck Veterinary Manual lists causes that include tumors, inflammatory disease, and drug exposure, plus bleeding signs like vomit that looks like coffee grounds. Merck Veterinary Manual: Gastrointestinal ulcers
Can Cats Get Ulcers? Signs And Red Flags
Ulcers don’t have one “signature” sign. Many signs overlap with hairballs or other gut problems. What changes the urgency is bleeding, dehydration, or fast decline.
Signs You Might Notice At Home
- Vomiting that keeps returning
- Dark vomit that looks like coffee grounds
- Stool that is black and sticky, or stool with visible blood
- Less interest in food, slower eating, or walking away after a few bites
- Hunched posture, guarding the belly, or crying when picked up
- Low energy, hiding more, or weight loss over weeks
When To Treat It As Urgent
- Bright red blood in vomit
- Black tar-like stool plus weakness or pale gums
- Repeated vomiting with no water staying down
- Collapse or very fast breathing
- Known access to human pain meds, rodent bait, or toxic plants
What Dark Vomit And Black Stool Can Signal
Fresh blood in vomit is easy to spot. Digested blood can be trickier. When blood sits in the stomach, acid changes its color and texture. That’s why some cats vomit material that looks like wet coffee grounds.
Black, sticky stool can mean blood was digested as it moved through the gut. People call it “tarry” for a reason. A cat with this sign may still walk around, yet they can be losing blood the whole time. If you see black stool plus low energy, pale gums, or rapid breathing, treat it as urgent and bring a photo of the stool if you can.
Not every dark stool is blood. Some diets and supplements can darken stool. The safer choice is to assume bleeding until a vet proves otherwise.
Vomiting alone has a long list of causes. Cornell’s Feline Health Center shows how wide that list can be, which is why pattern and severity matter. Cornell Feline Health Center: Vomiting
Cats With Ulcers: Common Causes And Risk Triggers
Ulcers tend to show up when something damages the lining, changes blood flow, or raises acid exposure. These are the buckets vets sort through early.
Medication Trouble, Especially Human Pain Relievers
Cats handle many drugs very differently than people. A single dose of a human pain reliever can irritate the stomach and can harm kidneys. Some prescription anti-inflammatory drugs can be risky when used outside label directions.
The U.S. FDA posts safety information on boxed warnings for meloxicam labels related to serious risks in cats when used extra-label. FDA: Boxed warning on meloxicam labels
Inflammation And Long-Running Gut Disease
Chronic irritation of the stomach or intestine can wear down the lining. Some cats cycle through nausea, picky eating, and soft stool for months before bleeding shows up.
Tumors, Masses, Or Blockage
Masses can ulcerate, and blockages can trigger relentless vomiting and poor blood flow. Cats may show weight loss, belly pain, or anemia.
Whole-Body Illness
Some illnesses change circulation or clotting in ways that raise the chance of gut bleeding. A vet visit helps sort whether the stomach problem is the main issue or a sign of something larger.
Severe Or Recurrent Gastritis
Gastritis means inflammation of the stomach lining. VCA’s client page lists causes, usual signs, and the kinds of treatments vets may use. VCA Animal Hospitals: Gastritis in cats
Ulcer Causes And Clues At A Glance
Use this table to connect what you’re seeing with the sort of questions a clinic may ask. It’s not a diagnosis tool.
| Possible Trigger | Clues You Might Notice | What A Vet May Check |
|---|---|---|
| Human pain meds (ibuprofen, naproxen, aspirin) | Sudden vomiting, drooling, dark stool, fast decline | Kidney values, hydration status, bleeding signs |
| Prescription anti-inflammatory used outside label directions | Vomiting after dosing, poor appetite, dark stool | Medication history, kidney and liver labs |
| Chronic gut inflammation | On-and-off nausea, weight loss, soft stool | Fecal tests, bloodwork, ultrasound, diet plan |
| Foreign material in the gut | Retching, no stool, belly pain, hiding | X-rays or ultrasound, exam for blockage |
| Stomach or intestinal tumor | Slow weight loss, anemia, repeated vomiting | Imaging, scope exam, biopsy when needed |
| Toxin or caustic exposure | Burns around mouth, drooling, repeated vomiting | Exposure history, mouth exam, fluid balance |
| Parasites or infection | Vomiting, diarrhea, dull coat, poor growth in kittens | Fecal testing and parasite plan |
| Kidney or liver disease | More drinking, weight change, low energy | Bloodwork, urine tests, blood pressure |
How Vets Confirm Ulcers In Cats
The clinic works in two tracks: confirm ulceration and hunt the cause. Expect a mix of history, lab work, and imaging.
History And Exam
Bring a list of all meds and supplements in the home. A vet will check hydration, belly pain, gum color, and heart rate.
Blood And Urine Testing
These tests can show anemia from blood loss, protein shifts, dehydration, or kidney strain. They can’t “see” an ulcer, yet they show how hard the body is being hit.
Imaging And Scope Exams
X-rays can help rule out a blockage. Ultrasound can show thickened walls, masses, or fluid in the belly, though small ulcers can still hide. Endoscopy is the most direct way to view the lining and take samples, yet it may not be available at every clinic.
Treatment You May Hear About
Treatment plans vary by cause and by how sick the cat is. A stable cat with mild signs may go home with meds. A cat that is weak, dehydrated, or bleeding may need hospital care.
Acid Reduction And Coating Meds
Vets often pair an acid reducer with a coating agent that sticks to injured tissue. Dosing schedules matter because coating meds can interfere with other medicines.
Fluids And Nausea Control
If a cat can’t keep water down, dehydration can set in fast. Clinics may give fluids under the skin or through a vein. Anti-nausea meds reduce vomiting and give the stomach time to settle.
Root-Cause Care
This might mean stopping a drug, treating parasites, switching diet under vet direction, or managing kidney disease. If a mass or blockage is present, surgery may be needed.
What Recovery Can Look Like
Some cats feel better within a day or two once vomiting settles and they can keep food down. Healing still takes time. Your vet may recheck bloodwork to see if anemia is improving and to confirm kidneys are handling meds and hydration.
If a diet change is part of the plan, stick to it for the full trial period your vet sets. Switching foods back and forth can restart nausea and makes the results harder to read.
What You Can Do At Home While You Arrange Care
You can’t treat an ulcer safely with over-the-counter meds. Home care is about observation, hydration, and avoiding triggers.
Stop All Unapproved Medications
If you gave any human pain med, treat it as urgent. Call a veterinary clinic right away.
Offer Water In Small Amounts
If your cat is vomiting, a big bowl of water can come right back up. Try small sips more often. If water won’t stay down, go in.
Keep Meals Small
If your cat is still eating, small meals of their regular food may sit better than a full bowl. If they refuse food for a day, move the call up the list since cats can run into liver trouble when they stop eating.
Track A Clear Symptom Log
A short log helps a clinic act faster. Note vomiting times and appearance, stool color, appetite, water intake, and possible toxin access.
Home Log And Vet-Visit Prep
This table is a simple checklist you can copy into a note app.
| What To Record | How To Record It | Why It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Vomiting timing | Time of day, relation to meals | Shows patterns and urgency |
| Vomiting look | Food, foam, bile, coffee-ground texture, red blood | Signals bleeding or blockage |
| Stool look | Normal, black/tarry, red streaks | Points to upper vs lower gut bleeding |
| Appetite | Normal, reduced, none | Shows dehydration risk |
| Water intake | More, less, none; note vomiting after drinking | Links to hydration status |
| Med access | List meds in the home, plus any dosing errors | Guides drug screening |
| Recent changes | Food swap, new treats, travel, boarding | Helps narrow triggers |
Preventing Ulcers In Cats
- Store human meds in closed cabinets, not on counters or nightstands.
- Give only medicines prescribed for your cat, at the exact dose and schedule.
- Share all supplements and flea products with your vet, since mixes can cause trouble.
- Watch for slow changes: weight loss, picky eating, or repeated hairball-like vomiting.
- Keep up with parasite control and checkups so chronic illness is caught earlier.
Ulcers can turn serious when bleeding starts. Treat blood in vomit or black stool as urgent, bring your notes, and bring your med list.
References & Sources
- Merck Veterinary Manual.“Gastrointestinal Ulcers in Small Animals.”Veterinary overview of causes, signs, diagnosis, and treatment of GI ulceration.
- Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine.“Vomiting.”Explains the wide range of causes behind feline vomiting and when evaluation is needed.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration.“Information About the Boxed Warning on Meloxicam Labels Regarding Safety Risks in Cats.”Describes labeled safety risks and warnings tied to meloxicam use in cats.
- VCA Animal Hospitals.“Gastritis in Cats.”Client education on stomach lining inflammation, signs, testing, and typical veterinary treatment options.
