Coffee and Tea (Caffeine)

🔴 HIGH — Dangerous

Why is it risky?

Coffee, tea, and other caffeinated beverages contain caffeine, a methylxanthine that cats cannot metabolize effectively. Caffeine inhibits phosphodiesterase, elevates cyclic AMP, and stimulates the CNS and cardiovascular system. It shares this mechanism with theobromine (the toxic compound in chocolate). Cats are significantly more sensitive to methylxanthines than humans due to slower hepatic clearance.

Affected Systems

Nervous · Cardiovascular

Symptoms

Restlessness, hyperactivity, rapid breathing, elevated heart rate, cardiac arrhythmias, muscle tremors, hyperthermia, seizures.

What To Do

Contact vet or poison control immediately. No safe home treatment. Vet may induce vomiting if ingestion was recent. Cardiac monitoring and supportive care may be required.

Notes

Applies to: espresso, filter coffee, black tea, green tea, energy drinks, cola, caffeinated protein shakes. Decaffeinated coffee still contains residual caffeine, it is not safe. Tea bags and coffee grounds are more concentrated than brewed beverages and represent higher risk. Matcha is particularly high in caffeine relative to its volume.

Sources

→ ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center — aspca.org

→ Merck Veterinary Manual

⚠️ Disclaimer: The information on SafeCatBase is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional veterinary advice. Always consult a qualified veterinarian for any health concerns about your cat.
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