11 Boundaries and Non-Applicability · 11.1 Emergency Boundary
11.1 Emergency Boundary
Feline Fat-Based Metabolism (Fat-Based Metabolism)
Emergency boundary defines signals that require immediate clinical handling and must not be processed as ordinary food-structure interpretation.
Feline FBM does not replace emergency care. When Clinical Boundary Layer emergency conditions appear, structure backtrace stops until clinical assessment is underway.
This page belongs to the boundary layer—not the mechanism layer.
Enter emergency boundary when any of the following are present:
1. Inability to urinate or straining with no output.
2. Repeated or protracted vomiting.
3. Blood in stool or vomit.
4. Severe dehydration signs.
5. Severe pain or distress.
6. Food refusal with clear decline in state.
7. Suspected gastrointestinal obstruction.
8. Neurological signs (collapse, seizures, severe disorientation).
9. Respiratory distress.
delay veterinary care to finish food-structure analysis
treat emergency vomiting as hairball-only output
treat urinary obstruction as drinks too little
FBM replaces emergency clinic visit
Valid use: recognize red-flag output → stop ordinary backtrace → seek immediate clinical care → resume structural nutrition reasoning only when clinically appropriate and stable.
This page defines emergency boundary only. It is not a clinical diagnosis system, not a treatment protocol, and not an effect-guarantee system.