Cat Wheezing: Asthma vs Hairball

Your cat is making a strange wheezing sound. She’s breathing with noticeable effort, her sides heaving more than usual, or she’s coughing in a way you haven’t heard before. Maybe…

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Your cat is making a strange wheezing sound. She’s breathing with noticeable effort, her sides heaving more than usual, or she’s coughing in a way you haven’t heard before. Maybe she’s hunched over with her neck extended, working hard to breathe. Or perhaps she’s making repeated coughing or hacking sounds that seem like she’s trying to bring something up. You’re not sure if she’s choking, having trouble breathing, or just dealing with a hairball.

Wheezing and respiratory distress in cats can look remarkably similar to hairball coughing, but the two conditions require completely different responses. Feline asthma is a serious respiratory condition causing inflammation and constriction of the airways, making breathing difficult. Hairballs are accumulated fur in the stomach that cats occasionally vomit up, usually with some coughing or gagging beforehand. One is a medical condition requiring treatment, while the other is a normal (though unpleasant) part of cat life.

The challenge is that both can involve coughing, both can cause your cat to crouch with her neck extended, and both can produce concerning sounds. However, asthma affects breathing and gets progressively worse without treatment, while hairballs are temporary episodes that resolve when the hairball comes up. Learning to distinguish between these two conditions helps you know when your cat needs emergency care, routine veterinary evaluation, or just reassurance and cleanup.

This guide explains how to tell the difference between asthma and hairballs, what each condition looks like, what causes them, when respiratory symptoms require immediate emergency care, and how each condition is treated and managed.

Understanding Normal Cat Respiratory Sounds

Before identifying problems, it helps to know what’s normal.

Normal Breathing

At rest:

After activity:

Normal Occasional Sounds

Occasional cough: Once in a while, perfectly healthy cats might cough briefly. A single cough that doesn’t recur isn’t concerning.

Sneezing: Occasional sneezes are normal, especially after sniffing dusty areas.

Purring and chirping: These vocalizations are normal communication sounds, not respiratory distress.

What Feline Asthma Is

Feline asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the lower airways, similar to human asthma.

How Asthma Affects Cats

Airway inflammation: The airways (bronchi and bronchioles) in the lungs become inflamed and swollen, narrowing the passages air travels through.

Mucus production: Inflamed airways produce excessive thick mucus that further blocks airflow.

Bronchoconstriction: The smooth muscles around airways constrict (tighten), making the airways even narrower.

Result: Less air can get in and out of the lungs. Your cat has to work much harder to breathe, especially to exhale.

What Causes Asthma

Asthma is believed to be an allergic reaction, though the specific triggers vary by cat.

Common triggers:

Individual variation: Each cat reacts to different triggers. What causes problems for one asthmatic cat might not affect another.

Who Gets Asthma

Age: Most commonly develops in young to middle-aged cats (2 to 8 years old), though cats of any age can develop it.

Breed: Siamese and Himalayan cats may have slightly higher risk, but all breeds can develop asthma.

Prevalence: Estimated 1% to 5% of cats have asthma, making it relatively common.

Asthma Symptoms

Coughing: The most common symptom. The cough sounds dry and hacking. Your cat might crouch low with neck extended while coughing.

Wheezing: High-pitched whistling sound during breathing, especially when exhaling. Sometimes audible without a stethoscope, though mild wheezing might only be heard by your vet.

Difficulty breathing (dyspnea):

Posture changes:

Reduced activity:

Episodes vs chronic: Some cats have asthma attacks (acute episodes of severe symptoms) while others have chronic ongoing symptoms that wax and wane.

Asthma Severity Levels

Mild: Occasional coughing, no breathing difficulty at rest, normal activity level between episodes.

Moderate: Regular coughing, mild breathing difficulty, some activity reduction, occasional wheezing.

Severe: Frequent coughing, obvious difficulty breathing even at rest, significant wheezing, reduced activity, open-mouth breathing during episodes.

Life-threatening: Severe respiratory distress, blue gums, collapse, inability to breathe. This is a medical emergency.

What Hairballs Are

Hairballs are clumps of hair that accumulate in a cat’s stomach from grooming, eventually vomited up.

How Hairballs Form

Normal grooming: Cats spend hours daily grooming. Their tongue has tiny backward-facing barbs (papillae) that catch loose hair.

Swallowing hair: The caught hair is swallowed during grooming. Most passes through the digestive tract and exits in feces.

Accumulation: Sometimes hair accumulates in the stomach instead of passing through, forming a compact mass.

Vomiting: When the hairball becomes large enough or irritating enough, the cat vomits it up. This is the body’s way of clearing something that can’t pass through the digestive system.

Normal Hairball Frequency

Occasional is normal: Most cats produce a hairball every week or two, with some variation by individual cat and coat length.

Long-haired cats: May have hairballs more frequently than short-haired cats due to more loose fur.

Seasonal variation: Hairballs often increase during shedding seasons (spring and fall).

What’s too frequent: More than one hairball per week, or hairballs accompanied by other symptoms (loss of appetite, lethargy, vomiting food), warrant veterinary evaluation.

Hairball Symptoms

Pre-hairball behavior:

Duration: The pre-vomiting phase usually lasts 30 seconds to 2 minutes.

The hairball:

After expulsion: Your cat immediately returns to normal. No continued distress, breathing difficulty, or other symptoms.

Important distinction: Hairball episodes are isolated events that end when the hairball comes up. Your cat doesn’t show ongoing symptoms between hairball episodes.

Distinguishing Asthma from Hairballs

Several key differences help you tell these conditions apart.

Sound Differences

Asthma cough:

Hairball cough:

Posture Differences

Asthma:

Hairball:

Outcome Differences

Asthma:

Hairball:

Breathing Pattern Differences

Asthma:

Hairball:

Timing and Frequency

Asthma:

Hairball:

Associated Symptoms

Asthma:

Hairball:

Response to Position

Asthma: Cat must maintain upright position to breathe comfortably. Lying flat makes breathing harder.

Hairball: Position is about facilitating vomiting, not breathing. Cat can lie down comfortably once hairball is up.

When It’s Definitely Asthma

Certain signs clearly indicate asthma rather than hairballs.

Wheezing sound: True wheezing is an asthma symptom, not a hairball symptom.

Blue gums or tongue: Indicates oxygen deprivation, always a respiratory emergency.

Open-mouth breathing: Normal cats breathe through their nose. Open-mouth breathing (except briefly after vigorous exercise) indicates respiratory distress.

Rapid breathing at rest: Over 40 breaths per minute while resting indicates a problem.

Chronic daily coughing: Regular daily coughing, especially if nothing is ever produced, suggests asthma.

Episodes lasting more than a few minutes: Hairball episodes are brief (1-2 minutes typically). Prolonged episodes suggest respiratory disease.

Progression over days to weeks: Symptoms that worsen over time indicate disease, not hairballs.

When It’s Definitely Just Hairballs

Produces an actual hairball: If a hairball comes up and your cat immediately returns to normal, that episode was a hairball.

Infrequent isolated episodes: Once every week or two with completely normal behavior between episodes.

No breathing difficulty: Normal respiratory rate and effort between episodes.

Clear pattern: Always follows the same sequence: retching sounds, vomiting, hairball production, immediate return to normal.

Long-haired cat during shedding season: Context makes hairballs more likely.

Emergency Situations

Some respiratory symptoms require immediate emergency care.

Go to Emergency Vet Immediately If:

Severe breathing difficulty:

Blue or pale gums: Normal gums are pink. Blue, purple, gray, or white gums indicate life-threatening oxygen deprivation.

Collapse or extreme weakness: Unable to stand or walk, lying on her side.

No improvement after several minutes: If your cat has been struggling to breathe for 5+ minutes without improvement.

Sudden severe episode: Acute onset of severe symptoms, especially if your cat has known asthma.

Can’t lie down: Must remain sitting up to breathe at all.

These are life-threatening emergencies. Don’t wait to see if they improve.

When to Call Your Regular Vet

Schedule appointment within 24-48 hours if:

Can monitor briefly at home if:

Veterinary Diagnosis

Determining whether your cat has asthma requires veterinary evaluation.

History and Physical Examination

Your vet will ask:

Physical exam includes:

Chest X-rays

The most important diagnostic test for suspected asthma.

What X-rays show:

Limitations: Some asthmatic cats have normal X-rays between attacks.

Bloodwork

Checks overall health and rules out other conditions.

Complete blood count: May show elevated eosinophils (white blood cells elevated in allergic conditions).

Chemistry panel: Rules out other diseases causing coughing.

Heartworm Testing

In some regions, heartworm disease causes respiratory symptoms similar to asthma. Testing rules this out.

Airway Sampling (Bronchoalveolar Lavage)

For definitive diagnosis, fluid is flushed into the airways and retrieved for analysis.

What it shows: High numbers of eosinophils confirm asthma.

When performed: Usually by specialists, not routine for mild cases.

Ruling Out Hairballs

If your cat frequently coughs but never produces hairballs, and especially if X-rays show airway changes, asthma is much more likely than hairballs.

Treatment for Asthma

Asthma is a chronic condition requiring ongoing management.

Corticosteroids

The mainstay of asthma treatment.

Oral steroids:

Inhaled steroids:

Bronchodilators

Open constricted airways, providing immediate relief.

Albuterol (short-acting):

Terbutaline or other long-acting bronchodilators:

Emergency Treatment

For cats in respiratory crisis:

Oxygen therapy: Provides immediate stabilization.

Injectable steroids: Fast-acting to reduce inflammation.

Bronchodilators: Open airways quickly.

Hospitalization: Monitoring and continued treatment until stable.

Environmental Management

Critical for controlling asthma.

Reduce triggers:

Identify and avoid specific triggers: Track when symptoms worsen to identify your cat’s particular triggers.

Long-term Management

Regular medications: Most asthmatic cats need daily preventive medication (steroids) plus rescue medication (bronchodilators) for acute episodes.

Monitoring: Regular vet checkups to assess control, adjust medications, and catch problems early.

Weight management: Keep your cat at healthy weight. Obesity worsens asthma.

Emergency plan: Know when to give rescue medication and when to seek emergency care.

Treatment for Hairballs

Managing hairballs focuses on prevention.

Regular Brushing

Daily brushing: Removes loose fur before your cat swallows it during grooming.

Especially important: Long-haired cats and during shedding seasons.

Tools: Slicker brushes, metal combs, de-shedding tools (FURminator).

Hairball Prevention Products

Petroleum jelly based products:

Hairball prevention diets:

Hairball treats:

Adequate Hydration

Ensure water intake: Good hydration helps everything move through the digestive system more easily.

Encourage drinking:

When Hairballs Require Treatment

Excessive hairballs: More than once a week might indicate:

Complications: Rarely, large hairballs cause obstruction requiring veterinary treatment or even surgery.

Living with an Asthmatic Cat

Medication Compliance

Give medications consistently: Asthma control depends on regular preventive medication, not just treating attacks.

Learn inhaler technique: If using inhaled medications, proper technique is essential. Your vet demonstrates proper mask fit and counting breaths.

Keep rescue medication available: Always have bronchodilator on hand for acute symptoms.

Monitor Symptoms

Track:

Report changes: Tell your vet if symptoms worsen or medication seems less effective.

Create Asthma-Friendly Environment

Maintain clean air: Regular cleaning, air filtration, eliminating triggers.

Low-stress environment: Stress can trigger asthma attacks. Maintain calm, predictable household.

Emergency Preparedness

Know warning signs: Recognize when your cat is getting worse and needs emergency care.

Emergency vet location: Know where the nearest 24-hour emergency vet is located.

Current medications: Keep list of all medications and doses for emergency situations.

Quality of Life

Most asthmatic cats live normal, happy lives with proper treatment. Work with your vet to find the medication regimen that controls symptoms with minimal side effects.


Frequently Asked Questions

My cat coughs occasionally but never produces a hairball. Does she have asthma?

Possibly. Regular coughing without ever producing hairballs is a red flag for respiratory disease like asthma rather than hairballs. However, a single occasional cough isn’t necessarily asthma either. If coughing occurs more than once a week, worsens over time, or is accompanied by any breathing difficulty, have your cat evaluated. Your vet can determine through examination and X-rays whether asthma is present.

Can cats have both asthma and hairballs?

Yes, they’re not mutually exclusive. An asthmatic cat can still have occasional hairballs. However, if your cat has been diagnosed with asthma, don’t assume every coughing episode is “just a hairball.” Monitor carefully and know the difference between her normal hairball episodes and asthma symptoms. When in doubt, treat it as an asthma symptom and give rescue medication if prescribed.

Is cat asthma curable or will my cat need medication forever?

Asthma is a chronic condition without a cure. Most cats require lifelong medication to control symptoms, though the specific medications and doses might be adjusted over time. Some cats go through periods where symptoms are well-controlled with minimal medication, while others need more aggressive treatment. Environmental management reduces medication needs for some cats but rarely eliminates the need entirely.

My cat’s asthma seems worse at night. Why?

Nighttime worsening is common in asthma. Several factors contribute: circadian rhythms affect hormone levels that influence airway inflammation, lying down makes breathing slightly harder, and nighttime may coincide with exposure to certain triggers (dust mites in bedding, for example). Inhaled steroids given in the evening can help. Using air purifiers in sleeping areas and washing bedding frequently in hot water also helps.

Are hairballs dangerous? When do they become a problem?

Occasional hairballs (once every week or two) are normal and not dangerous. However, excessive hairballs (more than weekly), hairballs accompanied by loss of appetite or lethargy, or inability to bring up a hairball after repeated attempts can indicate problems. Rarely, large hairballs cause intestinal obstruction, a serious condition requiring surgery. If your cat is retching repeatedly without producing anything, acts sick, or stops eating, see your vet immediately.

My cat was diagnosed with asthma but the inhaler isn’t helping. What should I do?

Several possibilities: inhaler technique might be incorrect (mask not fitting properly, not enough breaths delivered), your cat may need a higher dose, the specific medication might not be right for her, or triggers in the environment aren’t controlled. Schedule a recheck with your vet. They’ll review your inhaler technique, assess symptom control, and possibly adjust medications. Some cats need combination therapy (steroids plus bronchodilators) or switching from inhaled to oral medications.

Can I prevent my cat from developing asthma?

There’s no proven way to prevent asthma since the exact cause isn’t fully understood. However, reducing exposure to potential triggers might lower risk: don’t smoke around cats, use low-dust litter, maintain clean air with filters, avoid excessive use of scented products, and minimize stress. Keeping your cat at a healthy weight is also important since obesity worsens respiratory function.

How can I tell if my cat is having an asthma emergency versus just a bad attack?

An emergency is characterized by: inability to catch her breath despite rescue medication, blue or pale gums, open-mouth breathing, extreme distress (panic), collapse, or symptoms lasting more than 5-10 minutes without improvement. A “bad but manageable” attack involves labored breathing that responds to rescue medication within a few minutes, maintains pink gums, and your cat can still lie down comfortably after treatment. When in doubt, err on the side of caution and seek emergency care. Asthma attacks can deteriorate rapidly.