Cats can be surprisingly dose-sensitive, and the same prescription can look different from one cat to the next. Differences in absorption, age, body condition, and concurrent illness can change how long the effect lasts and how strong it feels. Pharmacokinetic work in cats shows measurable variability in how gabapentin moves through the body, which helps explain why “one-size-fits-all” expectations fail (Adrian, 2018). This is also why gabapentin dosage cats questions must be answered by the prescribing veterinarian, not a chart.
What to track in the first 4–6 weeks: (1) time from dosing to noticeable calm, (2) peak wobbliness window, (3) appetite at the next meal, (4) litter box confidence, (5) ability to be handled (ears, paws, belly), (6) recovery time back to normal play, (7) any agitation. Bringing these “change signals” to recheck visits helps the vet fine-tune the plan.