← All breeds

Ragdoll: health conditions to watch

Ragdolls are large, docile, affectionate cats. Their defining health consideration is a heart-muscle condition with a known genetic link, with the urinary tract worth keeping an eye on too.

What to watch in a Ragdoll

A predisposition is a “worth knowing”, not a diagnosis. Most Ragdolls never develop these — but knowing the early signs means you can act early.

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM)

Learn about Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM)

Ragdolls carry a specific HCM gene mutation; a DNA test and cardiac ultrasound are why this is worth asking a breeder about, and knowing the emergency signs (sudden laboured breathing or a painful back leg) matters.

Join the Heart Health community →

The breed can be prone to lower urinary tract trouble, including stones; straining or frequent tray trips needs a check, and a male cat straining unproductively is an emergency.

Join the Urinary Health community →

Start here

Screening and Genetics: Maine Coons, Ragdolls and the proBNP Test

Three different tests get talked about for feline hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and online they are often thrown together as if you could pick any one of them. A gene swab, a blood test, a heart scan. They are not...

Feline HCM Explained: The Thickened Heart, and Why Cats Hide It

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a mouthful of a diagnosis, and most owners leave the consulting room holding the letters HCM and not much else. Meanwhile the cat it refers to is asleep on the sofa, looking entirely fine....

Saddle Thrombus: The Sudden Clot Every HCM Owner Should Know

A cat who seemed entirely well an hour ago is abruptly screaming in pain, dragging its back legs, and unable to stand. There is one feline emergency that frightens vets as much as it frightens owners, and this is it. To...

Living With a Cat With HCM: Monitoring, Stress and Rechecks

A diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy comes with a steep learning curve, but here is the part to hold onto first: it does not have to mean a fearful life, for you or for your cat. Many cats with HCM live for years...

Feline HCM: Prognosis, From Incidental Murmur to Managed Disease

The question behind every other question, the one that rarely gets asked aloud in the consult room, is how long you have and how bad it will get. You deserve a real answer to that, not a single grim figure...

When a Cat With HCM Goes Into Heart Failure

Heart failure in a cat usually skips the warnings owners brace for. No cough builds over weeks, no visible slow decline. A cat who seemed perfectly fine in the morning is, by the evening, sitting hunched and breathing...

Looking after a Ragdoll

  • Ask about the HCM DNA test and cardiac ultrasound in the breeding lines
  • Watch litter-tray habits and act quickly on any straining
Join PetsLikeMine — it’s free

Vet-built content, condition communities, and health tracking for cats and cats.