You notice your cat’s eyes look different. Her pupils are enormous, like two black circles filling almost the entire eye. You shine a light to see if they constrict and they don’t respond, or respond minimally. This isn’t just in dim lighting or when she’s excited; the pupils stay dilated constantly, even in bright light. When you look closely, the black pupils seem to dominate her eyes in a way that feels abnormal.
Persistently dilated pupils in cats, called mydriasis, isn’t just an odd appearance issue. It’s a medical sign that something is affecting either the eyes themselves or the neurological systems that control pupil size. While pupils naturally dilate in dim light, during play, or when cats are excited or fearful, they should constrict back to normal in bright light. When pupils stay dilated regardless of lighting conditions, this signals a problem.
High blood pressure, or hypertension, is one of the most serious causes of persistently dilated pupils in cats. Hypertension can cause sudden blindness when extremely high blood pressure damages the retina. The pupils dilate because the retina no longer functions properly, and they don’t respond to light because the normal visual pathway is damaged. This is a medical emergency that can cause permanent blindness if not treated immediately.
Other serious conditions also cause persistent pupil dilation, including brain problems, toxin exposure, glaucoma, and certain medications. Understanding what normal pupils look like, recognizing when dilation is abnormal, knowing which causes represent emergencies, and seeking appropriate veterinary care quickly can save your cat’s vision and potentially her life.
This guide explains how pupils normally work, what causes persistent dilation, how to recognize hypertensive emergencies, what other conditions cause similar symptoms, how veterinarians diagnose the problem, and what treatments exist for various causes.
Understanding Normal Pupils
Before identifying problems, it’s important to understand normal pupil function.
Normal Pupil Appearance
In bright light: Pupils constrict to narrow vertical slits. This protects the sensitive retina from too much light and improves depth perception for hunting.
In dim light: Pupils dilate to large, round openings. This allows maximum light to enter, helping cats see in near darkness.
Size changes: The transition from constricted to dilated (and vice versa) happens smoothly and relatively quickly, usually within seconds of lighting changes.
Normal Pupil Responses
Light response (pupillary light reflex): When light shines in the eye, that pupil constricts immediately (direct response). The other pupil also constricts slightly (consensual response). This is a critical reflex controlled by neurological pathways.
Both pupils should match: In normal cats, both pupils are the same size and respond identically to lighting changes. This is called isocoria.
Accommodation: Pupils also adjust based on focusing distance and arousal state, but light is the primary driver.
Normal Temporary Dilation
Excitement or play: Pupils dilate when cats are aroused, playing, or hunting. This is temporary and pupils return to normal afterward.
Fear or stress: Frightened cats have dilated pupils as part of the “fight or flight” response. Again, temporary.
Dim lighting: Obviously normal in darkness or low-light situations.
Waking from sleep: Pupils are often dilated immediately upon waking, then adjust to ambient light within seconds.
What’s Abnormal
Persistent dilation: Pupils that stay large in bright light or don’t constrict when you shine a light directly at them.
Anisocoria: One pupil is dilated while the other is normal. This asymmetry always indicates a problem.
Progressive dilation: Pupils that gradually become more and more dilated over hours to days and don’t return to normal.
Lack of light response: Pupils that don’t constrict at all when exposed to bright light.
Hypertension: The Emergency Cause
High blood pressure is one of the most urgent causes of persistently dilated pupils.
What Hypertension Is
Hypertension means sustained elevated blood pressure. Normal feline blood pressure is approximately 120-140 mmHg systolic. Hypertension is generally defined as sustained pressures over 160 mmHg, with severe hypertension over 180 mmHg.
How Hypertension Affects Eyes
Retinal damage: Extremely high blood pressure damages the delicate blood vessels in the retina. These vessels can leak fluid, bleed, or cause the retina to detach from the back of the eye.
Sudden blindness: When the retina detaches or is severely damaged, cats go blind suddenly. The blindness can occur in one or both eyes.
Pupil dilation: The damaged retina no longer sends proper signals to the brain about light. The pupil dilates because the normal light reflex pathway is broken. The pupil doesn’t constrict in bright light because the eye essentially can’t “see” the light to trigger constriction.
Hemorrhage: Sometimes bleeding visible in the eye (hyphema) occurs, though often damage isn’t visible from the outside.
Why This Is an Emergency
Time-sensitive: If hypertension is treated within 24 to 48 hours of acute retinal detachment, some cats regain vision. Delayed treatment (beyond 48-72 hours) usually results in permanent blindness.
Life-threatening: Severe hypertension doesn’t just affect eyes. It can cause:
- Strokes
- Brain hemorrhage
- Heart problems
- Kidney damage
- Death
Underlying causes: Hypertension rarely occurs in isolation. It usually results from serious underlying diseases requiring treatment.
Symptoms of Hypertensive Crisis
Sudden pupil dilation: One or both pupils becoming persistently dilated, often over hours to days.
Sudden blindness:
- Bumping into objects
- Unable to track movement
- Disorientation
- Reluctance to move
Behavioral changes:
- Confusion or disorientation
- Vocalization (crying or yowling)
- Restlessness or agitation
- Hiding
Neurological signs:
- Head tilt
- Circling
- Seizures
- Weakness or collapse
No response to light: Shining a bright light in the eye produces no pupil constriction or minimal response.
Causes of Hypertension in Cats
Chronic kidney disease: The most common cause. Approximately 20% of cats with kidney disease develop hypertension.
Hyperthyroidism: Overactive thyroid frequently causes elevated blood pressure.
Primary hypertension: Elevated blood pressure without identifiable underlying cause. Less common in cats than secondary hypertension.
Heart disease: Can contribute to blood pressure problems.
Other: Diabetes, certain tumors, or other endocrine disorders.
Risk Factors
Age: Senior cats (over 10 years) are at highest risk.
Kidney disease: Any cat with kidney disease should have regular blood pressure monitoring.
Hyperthyroidism: Cats being treated for thyroid disease need blood pressure checks.
Other Serious Causes of Dilated Pupils
Glaucoma
Glaucoma means increased pressure inside the eye, damaging the optic nerve.
How it causes dilated pupils: The increased pressure damages internal eye structures. The pupil dilates and becomes fixed (doesn’t respond to light).
Symptoms:
- Dilated pupil in affected eye (usually one eye initially)
- Red or bloodshot eye
- Cloudy or bluish appearance to cornea
- Eye might look enlarged
- Obvious pain (squinting, rubbing at eye, tearing)
- Vision loss
Emergency: Glaucoma is painful and causes rapid permanent vision loss. Same-day treatment is essential.
Uveitis
Uveitis is inflammation inside the eye from various causes (infection, immune-mediated disease, trauma, cancer).
How it causes dilated pupils: Inflammation damages the iris and ciliary body, affecting pupil function. The inflamed eye is often painful, causing the pupil to dilate.
Symptoms:
- Red or inflamed eye
- Squinting and tearing
- Cloudiness in front of eye
- Pupil dilation
- Usually affects one eye initially
Retinal Degeneration
Progressive retinal degeneration causes gradual vision loss and pupil dilation.
Causes:
- Age-related degeneration
- Taurine deficiency (rare with modern diets)
- Genetic conditions
- Previous retinal damage
Pattern: Usually bilateral (both eyes). Gradual onset over months. Pupils dilate as retinas lose function. Night blindness often noticed first.
Neurological Problems
Brain or nerve problems affecting the pathways controlling pupils.
Causes:
- Brain tumors
- Trauma (head injury)
- Infections (encephalitis, FIP)
- Stroke
- Inflammatory brain disease
Symptoms:
- Often anisocoria (one dilated, one normal) if nerve damage is one-sided
- Other neurological signs: head tilt, circling, ataxia, behavior changes, seizures
- May progress rapidly
Toxins
Certain toxins affect the nervous system and cause pupil dilation.
Substances:
- Certain plants (angel’s trumpet, jimsonweed)
- Some medications (if overdosed)
- Amphetamines or similar stimulants
- Certain household chemicals
- Some pesticides
Pattern: Usually sudden onset following exposure. Often both pupils dilated. May be accompanied by other toxicity signs: vomiting, tremors, seizures, altered mental state.
Medications
Some medications cause pupil dilation as a side effect.
Examples:
- Atropine or tropicamide (used in eye exams, effects last hours to days)
- Certain pain medications
- Some anesthetics (residual effects)
Pattern: Dilation starts after medication administration. Usually temporary, resolving when medication wears off.
Dysautonomia (Key-Gaskell Syndrome)
Rare neurological condition affecting the autonomic nervous system.
Symptoms:
- Dilated pupils that don’t respond to light
- Dry eyes and nose
- Constipation
- Difficulty swallowing
- Reduced tear production
- Other autonomic dysfunction signs
Prognosis: Poor. Often fatal despite treatment.
Feline Leukemia Virus (FeLV)
FeLV can cause various eye problems including persistent pupil dilation through different mechanisms (uveitis, glaucoma, retinal disease, neurological effects).
What to Do at Home
When you notice persistently dilated pupils, immediate action is important.
Test Pupil Response
Flashlight test: In a dim room, shine a bright flashlight directly into each eye from 2 to 3 inches away.
Normal response: The pupil constricts rapidly into a slit.
Abnormal response:
- No constriction at all
- Minimal or slow constriction
- One pupil responds normally but the other doesn’t
Document: Note which eye(s) affected and degree of response.
Test for Vision
Simple vision tests:
Drop test: Drop a cotton ball or small soft object near your cat while she’s watching. Normal-sighted cats track falling objects.
Maze test: Rearrange furniture slightly. Blind cats bump into changes, sighted cats navigate easily.
Menace response: Quickly move your hand toward your cat’s face (don’t touch, don’t create wind). Normal cats blink or pull back. Blind cats don’t respond.
Important: Do these tests gently without frightening your cat.
Check for Other Symptoms
Look for:
- Behavioral changes
- Neurological signs (head tilt, circling, ataxia)
- Eye redness, cloudiness, or other visible abnormalities
- Signs of pain (squinting, pawing at face)
- Disorientation or confusion
- Recent medication or possible toxin exposure
Monitor Closely
Track:
- When you first noticed the dilated pupils
- Whether one or both eyes affected
- Any progression or changes
- All other symptoms
Do NOT Wait and See
Persistently dilated pupils, especially with no light response, require veterinary evaluation. Don’t wait days to see if it resolves.
When to Seek Emergency Care
Go to emergency vet immediately if:
- Sudden onset of persistently dilated pupils
- No pupil constriction when light is shined in the eyes
- Your cat appears blind (bumping into things, disoriented)
- One pupil is much larger than the other (anisocoria)
- Accompanied by neurological signs (head tilt, seizures, weakness, collapse)
- Red, painful, or abnormal-appearing eyes
- Behavioral changes or confusion
- Your cat has known kidney disease or hyperthyroidism
Can schedule regular vet appointment if:
- Gradual onset over weeks to months
- Pupils still respond somewhat to light
- No vision loss
- No other concerning symptoms
- Recent eye exam medications (dilation is expected and temporary)
When in doubt: Treat as urgent. Better to be overly cautious than risk permanent blindness or miss a serious condition.
Veterinary Diagnosis
Your veterinarian systematically identifies the cause.
History Taking
Questions:
- When did you notice the dilated pupils?
- Sudden or gradual onset?
- One or both eyes?
- Any trauma or injury?
- Possible toxin exposure?
- Recent medications?
- Other symptoms?
- Medical history (kidney disease, thyroid problems, previous eye issues)?
Physical Examination
General health assessment: Overall condition, heart rate, breathing, temperature.
Neurological examination: Testing for brain or nerve problems that might cause pupil abnormalities.
Ophthalmic Examination
Pupil testing:
- Pupillary light reflex (PLR) in each eye
- Comparing both eyes
- Testing direct and consensual responses
Eye inspection:
- Looking for redness, cloudiness, hemorrhage
- Examining cornea, anterior chamber, lens
- Checking for signs of trauma, inflammation, or infection
Ophthalmoscopy: Looking at the back of the eye (retina, optic nerve) with specialized instruments. This shows retinal detachment, hemorrhage, or degeneration.
Intraocular pressure (tonometry): Measuring pressure inside the eye to check for glaucoma.
Blood Pressure Measurement
Critical test: All cats with dilated pupils need blood pressure measurement to rule out hypertension.
Method:
- Usually measured on front leg or tail
- Multiple readings taken
- Patient needs to be relatively calm for accurate measurement
Interpretation:
- Normal: 120-140 mmHg systolic
- Prehypertensive: 140-159 mmHg
- Hypertensive: 160-179 mmHg
- Severely hypertensive: 180+ mmHg
Bloodwork
Complete blood count and chemistry panel:
- Kidney function (BUN, creatinine)
- Thyroid levels (T4)
- Blood sugar
- Electrolytes
- Liver function
- Overall health assessment
Urinalysis
Assessing kidney function and looking for other abnormalities.
Advanced Testing
Depending on findings:
- Ultrasound (evaluating kidneys, other organs)
- Chest X-rays or abdominal X-rays
- CT or MRI (for brain problems)
- Specialized eye exams by veterinary ophthalmologist
- Testing for FeLV/FIV
- Cerebrospinal fluid analysis (neurological problems)
Treatment
Treatment depends entirely on the underlying cause.
For Hypertension
Immediate treatment:
Amlodipine: Calcium channel blocker that lowers blood pressure.
- Usually started at 0.625 to 1.25 mg per cat per day
- Oral medication given daily
- Blood pressure rechecked in 7 to 14 days
- Dose adjusted based on response
Goals:
- Reduce blood pressure to safe levels (below 160 mmHg)
- Prevent further damage
- Hopefully restore vision if treated early
Monitoring:
- Regular blood pressure checks (initially every 1-2 weeks, then every 3-6 months)
- Bloodwork monitoring kidney function
- Ongoing assessment of vision
Treating underlying cause:
- Managing kidney disease
- Treating hyperthyroidism
- Addressing any other contributing conditions
Prognosis for vision:
- If treated within 24-48 hours of retinal detachment: 30-60% chance of vision returning
- After 48-72 hours: Poor prognosis for vision recovery
- Blood pressure control prevents further damage even if vision doesn’t return
For Glaucoma
Medical management:
- Eye drops to reduce intraocular pressure
- Oral medications (carbonic anhydrase inhibitors)
- Anti-inflammatory medications
- Pain medications
Surgical options:
- Laser procedures to reduce fluid production
- Drainage implants
- Enucleation (eye removal) for painful blind eyes
Prognosis: Depends on severity and how quickly treated. Many cases progress to blindness despite treatment.
For Uveitis
Anti-inflammatory medications:
- Topical steroid eye drops
- Systemic anti-inflammatories
Treating underlying cause:
- Antibiotics for infections
- Antifungals for fungal causes
- Immunosuppressive therapy for immune-mediated causes
Supportive care:
- Pain management
- Protecting the eye from further injury
For Retinal Problems
Taurine supplementation: If deficiency is the cause (rare).
Managing underlying disease: If retinal degeneration is secondary to other conditions.
Supportive care: Helping blind cats adapt to vision loss.
No cure: Most retinal degeneration is permanent and progressive.
For Neurological Causes
Treatment varies widely:
- Brain tumors: surgery, radiation, or palliative care
- Infections: antibiotics, antifungals, or antivirals
- Inflammatory disease: immunosuppressive therapy
- Trauma: supportive care, managing symptoms
Prognosis: Depends on specific condition.
For Toxin Exposure
Decontamination: If recent exposure, preventing further absorption.
Supportive care:
- IV fluids
- Medications to control symptoms
- Monitoring
Specific antidotes: When available for particular toxins.
Living with a Blind Cat
If vision loss is permanent, cats adapt remarkably well.
Environmental Modifications
Safety:
- Remove hazards
- Block access to stairs without supervision
- Pad sharp furniture corners
- Keep layout consistent
Resources:
- Keep food, water, and litter boxes in same locations
- Multiple litter boxes
- Easy access to essentials
Tactile cues:
- Textured mats near important locations
- Scent markers
- Consistent pathways
Interaction
Sound cues:
- Talk to your cat so she knows where you are
- Use specific words for activities
- Consistent vocal cues
Approach carefully: Don’t startle by touching unexpectedly. Make noise first.
Supervised outdoor time: Only in safe enclosed areas (screened porch, catio).
Enrichment
Non-visual play:
- Sound-making toys
- Toys with interesting textures
- Treat puzzles
- Interactive play using sounds
Smell enrichment:
- Catnip
- Silvervine
- Food puzzles
- Safe herbs
Quality of Life
Most blind cats live happy, full lives with appropriate accommodations. They navigate using memory, hearing, smell, and whiskers.
Prevention
Regular Checkups
Senior cats: Twice yearly veterinary exams including blood pressure measurement for cats over 10 years or those with risk factors.
Monitoring at-risk cats: Cats with kidney disease or hyperthyroidism need regular blood pressure monitoring.
Early Disease Detection
Bloodwork: Regular screening catches kidney disease and hyperthyroidism early, allowing treatment before hypertension develops.
Know Your Cat’s Eyes
Familiarity: Know what your cat’s normal pupils look like so you notice changes quickly.
Home checks: Periodically test pupil response to light at home, especially in senior cats.
Prompt Attention
Act quickly: Any sudden change in pupils warrants immediate veterinary evaluation. Early treatment dramatically improves outcomes.
Frequently Asked Questions
My cat’s pupils are dilated but she seems fine otherwise. Is this really an emergency?
Persistent pupil dilation even without other obvious symptoms can indicate serious problems like hypertension that may not show external signs until severe. Cats are experts at hiding illness. Just because she “seems fine” doesn’t mean nothing is wrong. Any pupil that doesn’t constrict in bright light or stays dilated constantly needs same-day to emergency evaluation. Vision loss from hypertension can happen suddenly, and early treatment is critical for vision preservation.
Can stress or fear cause pupils to stay dilated constantly?
Stress or fear causes temporary pupil dilation that resolves when the stressor is removed or the cat calms down. Pupils from stress will still constrict in bright light, just perhaps not as much as in a relaxed state. If pupils remain constantly dilated for hours to days regardless of lighting and never constrict normally, this indicates a medical problem, not just stress. Don’t dismiss persistent dilation as anxiety without veterinary evaluation.
One pupil is dilated and the other is normal. Is this more serious than both being dilated?
Yes, anisocoria (pupils of different sizes) is often more concerning than both being dilated. This asymmetry usually indicates a problem affecting one eye or one side of the nervous system specifically. Causes include trauma, glaucoma, uveitis, retinal detachment, or neurological damage. Anisocoria requires immediate evaluation. Even if your cat seems fine, same-day veterinary care is essential.
My cat had her eyes dilated at the vet. How long does this last?
Tropicamide (the most commonly used dilation drop) typically lasts 6 to 24 hours. Atropine (less commonly used) can last several days. If dilation persists beyond the expected duration (more than 24-48 hours after tropicamide, more than 3-5 days after atropine), contact your vet. Additionally, if medication-induced dilation is expected, your vet will have told you this was done. Spontaneous dilation without known medication use is not normal.
Can dilated pupils be a side effect of medications my cat is taking?
Some medications can cause pupil changes, though this is relatively uncommon. If your cat recently started a new medication and developed dilated pupils, contact your vet immediately to discuss whether this is a known side effect or indicates a problem. Don’t stop medication without veterinary guidance. Some medications that can affect pupils include certain pain medications, some sedatives, and specific eye drops. Your vet can determine if current medications explain the symptom.
My cat has kidney disease. Does this mean she’ll develop high blood pressure and go blind?
Not necessarily. While approximately 20% of cats with kidney disease develop hypertension, that means 80% don’t. However, cats with kidney disease should have blood pressure monitored regularly (every 3-6 months or more frequently if pressures are borderline). Early detection and treatment of hypertension prevents vision loss and other complications. With proper monitoring and management, many cats with kidney disease never develop blood pressure problems.
If my cat goes blind from hypertension, will treatment bring her vision back?
This depends on timing. If hypertension is treated within 24-48 hours of acute vision loss from retinal detachment, approximately 30-60% of cats regain at least some vision, though it may not return to completely normal. Beyond 48-72 hours, the chances of vision recovery drop dramatically as permanent retinal damage occurs. This is why immediate treatment of suspected hypertensive blindness is so critical. Even if vision doesn’t return, blood pressure control prevents further complications and damage to other organs.
Can cats with persistently dilated pupils and blindness still have good quality of life?
Yes, absolutely. Cats adapt remarkably well to blindness. With environmental modifications (keeping layout consistent, removing hazards, using sound and scent cues), most blind cats navigate confidently and live happy lives. They use memory, hearing, smell, touch (whiskers), and other senses to compensate. Many owners report their blind cats are so well-adapted that visitors don’t realize the cat can’t see. The key is treating the underlying cause of blindness to prevent other health complications.
