SYMPTOM

Straining to defecate

Prolonged or repeated attempts to pass stool, often with visible effort, vocalisation, or posturing in the litter tray or outdoors without producing a normal bowel movement.

Constipation and Colonic Disease

Straining to defecate is the hallmark sign of constipation, where hard, dry faecal material is difficult to pass through the colon and rectum. In cats, chronic constipation may progress to megacolon, where the colon becomes permanently dilated and loses its contractile ability. The straining may be accompanied by vocalisation, prolonged positioning, and the production of only small, hard faecal pellets or no stool at all.

Colitis and Rectal Inflammation

Inflammation of the colon (colitis) or rectum (proctitis) can produce frequent, urgent straining to defecate, often with the production of small volumes of soft or mucoid stool, sometimes with blood. The straining in colitis reflects increased urgency and colonic irritability rather than mechanical difficulty passing stool, and the stools produced tend to be soft rather than hard, which helps distinguish it from constipation.

Rectal or Colonic Obstruction

Masses within the rectum or distal colon, including polyps, tumours, or strictures from previous inflammation or surgery, can physically impede the passage of faecal material, producing straining as the animal attempts to move stool past the obstruction. The straining may be progressive as the obstruction grows, and the stools may change shape or become ribbon-like.

Pelvic or Perineal Disease

Conditions affecting the pelvic region — including previous pelvic fractures with canal narrowing, perineal hernias, or anal gland disease — can create mechanical barriers or pain-associated inhibition of defecation. Perineal hernias in dogs allow pelvic organs to displace into the perineal region, potentially trapping faeces and making defecation difficult.

Neurological

Conditions affecting the sacral spinal cord segments or the nerves supplying the colon and rectum can impair the coordinated muscular contractions needed for effective defecation. Sacral spinal disease, cauda equina syndrome, and dysautonomia can all produce chronic straining and constipation through disrupted nervous control of colonic and rectal function.

Why timing matters

Early observation

Early straining to defecate may present as slightly prolonged time spent in the litter tray or defecation position, with the animal producing stools that are somewhat harder or smaller than usual. The episodes may be intermittent, with normal defecation occurring between bouts of straining. At this stage, the cause may be transient — dietary indiscretion, mild dehydration, or environmental stress — and may resolve with simple measures.

Later presentation

Persistent or worsening straining suggests an ongoing process that is unlikely to self-resolve. The animal may spend increasingly long periods attempting to defecate, producing very little or no stool despite repeated efforts. Vocalisation during straining, visible distress, and association of the litter tray or defecation area with discomfort may develop. Some animals may begin defecating in inappropriate locations, associating their usual spot with pain. Blood may appear on the stool surface or in the litter tray from mucosal trauma caused by the passage of excessively hard stool.

The trajectory of straining depends on the underlying cause. Constipation-related straining tends to follow a pattern of escalating frequency and severity as colonic function deteriorates, with progressively shorter intervals between episodes requiring intervention. Colitis-related straining may fluctuate with the activity of the inflammatory process. Obstructive causes typically produce progressive worsening as the obstruction grows. Understanding whether the straining is getting worse, staying stable, or occurring in episodes helps characterise the underlying process.

When to explore further

Straining to defecate that persists for more than two to three days without the production of normal stool suggests significant faecal retention or colonic dysfunction that is unlikely to resolve spontaneously.

It is important to distinguish straining to defecate from straining to urinate, as the postures can appear very similar, particularly in cats. Checking whether the cat is producing urine normally and whether any faeces are being passed helps differentiate between these two important presentations.

Straining accompanied by the passage of bloody or mucoid stool, without the hard, dry faeces typical of constipation, may suggest colitis or rectal disease rather than simple constipation, which has different implications.

Progressive worsening of straining episodes over weeks to months, with each episode requiring more intervention to resolve and shorter symptom-free intervals between episodes, may suggest a deteriorating underlying condition.

Straining to defecate in a cat that has had previous pelvic trauma, spinal disease, or abdominal surgery may suggest a structural or neurological factor contributing to the difficulty.

Monitoring litter tray output carefully — noting the frequency of defecation, the size and consistency of stools produced, and the amount of time spent straining — provides objective data that can reveal trends over time. Comparing the cat's current defecation pattern against its previous baseline helps identify whether the straining represents a new development or a worsening of a pre-existing pattern. Ensuring adequate hydration through wet food and accessible water sources supports colonic function and stool consistency.

Last reviewed: 24 April 2026 · Dr Alastair Greenway MRCVS