T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
333.1 | Best Advice: Bring 'Em To a VET | INK::KALLIS | | Fri Sep 19 1986 12:26 | 11 |
| You shouldn't try to worm cats without the advice of vets.
Usually, a vet can administer worm medicine when needed.
Since "worming" consists of givving a specific poison that will
affect the worms _more_ than it will affect their host, you should
under any circumstances get _fresh_ weorm pills from a vet: the
"store-bought" stuff may be outdated.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.2 | I wormed mine at home once | HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Fri Sep 19 1986 15:25 | 13 |
| I wormed my two kitties at home; it had to be less traumatic than
stuffing them into their carriers: Nebula hates cars and gets very
panicky, while The Fickle simply hates vets. It worked, too; when
they did have to go in to the vet for their shots a few weeks later
(protesting every inch of the trip, two "crying boxes" on the floor
in the back seat of my car), they were both wormless. I gave them
the kind of stuff you mix up with their food, and they weren't oo
pleased with it, but it was the only food they had, so eventually
they ate it anyhow (same trouble happening right now trying to get
them to eat oil in their food -- Neb has hairballs again). It did
cause them some diarrhea. That was the only time they ever had
worms since I've owned them: Neb must have eaten one of her catches
for a change, and spread her problem to the other cat.
|
333.3 | Butter it up! | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Sep 19 1986 18:55 | 15 |
| I agree, bring them to the vet, so that the vet can give them the
proper dosage. However, the vet will most likely send you home with
pills since the cats have to be fasted.
Giving pills doesn't have to be bad. I've had no problem with giveing
pills of any kind to my four since I got the idea of stuffing the
pill in a wad of butter before trying to give it to them the normal
way (hold head up, open mouth wide, throw the pill straight down,
close cat's mouth and then stroke the throat). Actually, the worming
pills are real tiny, and kittens are only given a 1/4 to a 1/2 pill
so if you surround them in butter, the kitten *might* just eat it
out of your hand.
Good luck,
Deb
|
333.4 | | IOSG::READ | | Mon Sep 22 1986 04:11 | 14 |
| How strange that your cats have to be fasted. With the tablets
I get from the vet, you have to make sure to give the cat plenty
of food.
Because I've got 2 cats and a dog, my vet has advised that we worm
them 3 times a year, just to make sure. I tell the vet how much
the cats weigh, and he gives me some pills. I crush the pills and
then mix them up with a tiny bit of liver. This gets gulped down
in 2 seconds, and then they get the rest of their dinner. The dog
would take hers straight from me - she eats anything (and I mean
anything!).
Good luck
Jess
|
333.5 | | BASHER::WRIGHTON | I didn't touch it..Honest... | Mon Sep 22 1986 09:41 | 5 |
|
Thanks for the info ... a few different things to try.
cheers Dave W
|
333.6 | no worms until recently. | ROLL::CIAVOLA | | Mon Sep 29 1986 16:25 | 12 |
|
I don't understand why, for 3 years my 3 cats never had problems
with worms, until recently. Now they seem to come back as fast
as I get rid of them!
Pam C.
|
333.7 | Maybe its fleas | AKOV68::FRETTS | | Mon Sep 29 1986 16:50 | 12 |
| re .6
If the cats have fleas, then they can repeatedly have tape worm
from eating the fleas. My cats tend to get tape worm at least once
a year, because there is always a point where the fleas win and
I lose! Also, there is another variety of tape worm that comes
from only eating rodents (yeck!).
Poor kitties go through a lot, don't they?
Carole
|
333.8 | | MAGIC::DICKSON | | Tue Sep 30 1986 13:35 | 13 |
| You have to get rid of the fleas first. Best thing we have found is
a metal flea comb. We APPALLED and EMBARASSED when the vet used one
of these on our cats and pulled out all these fleas. We thought the
cats were pretty clean.
So we got a comb and have combed both cats once a day for a week. Each
day we got 4-5 fleas between the two cats. We had sprayed the house
too, foamed and sprayed the cats, etc. (out in the country with
sandy soil those bugs are everywhere!)
Penny has had a running battle with tapeworms. We have tried pills
(she spits them out), shots (fleas reinfested her), and now a gooey white
stuff you squirt down her throat with a plastic syringe (she vomits).
|
333.9 | flea comb | ROLL::CIAVOLA | | Wed Oct 01 1986 12:10 | 4 |
|
I've never heard of a metal flea comb. Where did you get it?
pam
|
333.10 | Flea combs: where and how | DELNI::WIX | | Wed Oct 01 1986 13:59 | 16 |
| re: < Note 333.9 by ROLL::CIAVOLA >
You can get one in pet stores and feed stores. Check the yellow
pages and ask when you get there.
Use it gently and slowly. Stop after each stroke and pinch
the fur off with fleas into a plastic bag that has flea spray
in it to kill them.
If you have a long haired cat give a basic brushing to the cat
first to get out any tangles because the flea comb is unforgiving
of them.
.wIx.
|
333.11 | A spoonful of playtime helps the medicine go down.... | SUBURB::COFFEYJ1 | | Thu Jun 23 1988 09:24 | 14 |
|
I really feel sorry for everyone with worming problems.
I was so chuffed when my method with my kitten Dinah worked.
Being a kitten she would, as all kitties seem to, pounce on and
bite anything rolled across the floor ....... easy solution?
I didn't try to convince her she had to take the pill, just rolled
it across the floor and she pounced on it and ate it leaving me
amazed and very impressed with myself!
Jo
Reading UK.
|