T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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557.1 | Same problem | VIDEO::USHER | | Tue Apr 21 1987 17:39 | 12 |
| My cat had some fur shaved on his leg back in January and it just
has grown back in completely. For awhile there I didn't think it
would ever grow back and it seemed like all of a sudden it just
appeared. I also know how it feels to have them not eat something
you want them to eat. Smurf will turn his nose up at something
in his food and then let me know he is not happy. I leave it
for him and sometimes he eats and other times he won't.
Mix the yeast well into his food. Don't leave it sitting on top
where he can see/smell it.
cath
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557.2 | what is growing in is a different color! | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Apr 21 1987 17:53 | 7 |
| Argus had his entire hind quarters shaved last December and while
it still isn't fully grown in, what has grown in is significanlty
lighter than his regular hair. The vet told me that a cat's hair
grows *very* s-l-o-w-l-y. I just hope that when he gets his summer
coat that it is all his regular golden color.
Deb
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557.3 | Try pill form. | NEBVAX::BELFORTE | Never try to out-stubborn a cat! | Tue Apr 21 1987 18:01 | 8 |
| Try using the pill form if the cat won't eat the powder. I have
been giving mine yeast pills for fleas, and the dog gets them too.
One of the cats just takes it like a treat, the other one we have
to force it.
Try it, it does work!
Mary-Lynn
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557.4 | cheat! | USHS01::MCALLISTER | Mars or Bust!! | Tue Apr 21 1987 21:09 | 9 |
| HI there,
Glad I'm an authority on something.
Try mixing it with something smelly, like tuna fish. Or add some
cod liver oil to the meal. and if that doesn't work, cheat (sprinkle
it on Figaro's fur and let them wash it off.
Dave
|
557.5 | Another suggestion. | DONJON::SCHREINER | Go ahead, make me PURRR... | Wed Apr 22 1987 12:02 | 22 |
| When I was showing Fire, it was really important to keep him in
full coat. I used a product called "PRODEAN" when he started to
shed. It didn't stop the shedding, but did encourage lots of new
hair growth. The product itself is actually predigested protein
and since it is "predigested" it sends the protein directly to the
hair folicles. (Or so I was told when I started using it!) It
did make a difference in not only the length of his hair, but also
in the thickness. His coat was noticably longer, thicker and softer
within a few weeks. Other breeders at the shows even noticed it.
I'm not sure if you can buy it at pet shops, but your vet may have
it. It not, you can get it at most cat shows, or can order from
Haddleigh House @ 207-676-3309.
It's a liquid that you add to the food....about 1/2 a dropper once
a day. It smells sweet...sorta like licorice. Both Fire and Lucki
gobbled up the food that I put it in....got to a point where Fire
wouldn't eat his food without it.
cin
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557.6 | try gnc | VIDEO::TEBAY | | Fri Apr 24 1987 12:28 | 5 |
| I had the same problem with the yeast. The only one
I found that the cats like(they love it) is the
chewable brewers yeast tablets put out by GNC. I
crumble them(they are big) and they eat them straight.
|
557.7 | He did grow it back, honest! | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Mon Apr 27 1987 21:02 | 25 |
| Monroe had a similar problem after the vet shaved off a rather large
patch of fur off his back. That was last March and by August it
had still not grown back. He looked like a punk rocker. I called
the vet about it (only took me 5 months to decide something was
wrong!8^) ) and we finally figured out that the reason Monroe's
hair wasn't growing back was because he was taking Ovaban to prevent
him from spraying. The hormone imbalance caused by the Ovaban kept
him from growing his hair, so we stopped the Ovaban and within a
couple of weeks he had new hair growing in. It only took about
a month for the hair to grow long enough that you couldn't detect
the spot any more.
Check with the vet about the problem. If nothing else, he should
know that the hair hasn't come in yet. My vet was very suprised
when I finally told him about Monroe.
And while we are on the subject of hair and it's loss, I just noticed
on Saturday that Monroe's fur is thinning drastically on his shoulders
and the back of his neck and is very stiff textured. All of the
undercoat seems to have come out with only the guard hairs remaining.
I show Monroe and I am deathly afraid that he might have caught
body mites at one of the shows. Does anyone have any experience
with this problem?
Jo
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557.8 | hair loss on the other side? | GALWAY::SMARTIN | | Tue Apr 28 1987 11:21 | 9 |
| This seemed like the 'hair loss clinic' note... so I have another
question.
Both of my kitties seem to have thinning hair particularly on the
lower parts of their tummy's. Only the female was shaved there
when spayed, but that grew back quickly and full, only later at
about 11 to 12 months it got real thin, and stayed that way.
Any ideas?
Sally
|
557.9 | Brewers Yeast CURE-ALL | LAIDBK::SHERRICK | Molly :^) | Tue Apr 28 1987 18:03 | 9 |
| That's a VERY common phenomenon in spayed females. Particularly
older ones. My mom's kitty Kelly had that happen too. The vet
said it was hormonal and no big deal. My mom decided she needed
more vitamins (my mom's cure for EVERYTHING), so she added lots of
brewers yeast to her food. It worked! Maybe mom has something
there.....
Good luck, and don't worry too much.
molly
|
557.10 | We always knew he was a little wimpy | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Fri May 01 1987 15:29 | 14 |
| Well we took Monroe to the vets last night to find out why his hair
is falling out and also why he insists on spending all day and all
night hiding behind the toilet in the guest bathroom.
As my husband says, the vet confirmed what he (Ken) already knew...
Monroe is lacking in male hormones... (es-say I, but what does that
have to do with hiding behind the toilet?) Answer - he is afraid
to come out!!!
Anyway - the vet put him on Progesterone (I think). 1/4 tablet
a day for 3 days and then 1/4 tablet once a week. What say the
rest of you about this?
Jo Ann
|
557.11 | I thought I heard this somewhere... | DONJON::SCHREINER | Go ahead, make me PURRR... | Fri May 01 1987 17:16 | 7 |
| Jo,
Didn't you say that Monroe was on OVABAN to stop him from spraying??
cin
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557.12 | I'm sooooo confuuuuuusedd!!!! | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Fri May 01 1987 18:21 | 13 |
| He was on Ovaban for about a year to keep him from spraying but
I stopped giving it to him because his hair wouldn't grow back after
the vet shaved him for an abcess. Now they are giving him another
hormone to make his hair grow back. I'm confused.
The vet said that this new drug will also help with his spraying,
which he has started to do occasionally. All this info seems to
contradict itself. First a hormone to stop him from spraying prevented
his hair from growing back, now a hormone to help his hair grow
back which also helps stop spraying. On top of that, if he is lacking
in male hormone, why is he spraying? Maybe its learned behavior.
Jo
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557.13 | It confuses me, too. | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri May 01 1987 18:39 | 19 |
|
RE: -1
Argus, who NEVER sprayed, went on Ovaban about 2 months ago because
he was attacking Alex. No sooner did he go on Ovaban he began spraying.
Now, I always had heard that Ovaban was given to cats to STOP their
spraying (among other things).
While I'm on the subject of spraying, I probably should pass this
along. I was spending a lot of time ripping up my carpets and trying
to wash out the urine with cold water. I just bought one of those
new Bissel Steam Cleaners that Leachemere is advertizing for $159
and it works fantasticlly, much better than the ones that you can
rent. You can use it as a wet/dry vac and has a very powerful suction
that will pull the liquid right out of the carpet. Then all I have
to do is put a little bit of vinegar or pet odor-eater enzyme on
the "accident" area.
Deb
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557.14 | | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Fri May 01 1987 22:32 | 12 |
| re: .13
Thanks for the tip, Deb. I wondered if those things worked (not
that I ever need one!
RE: .10
Low hormones or no low hormones, I bet if he met a REAL female cat
it wouldn't matter! ;-)
Marion
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557.15 | | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Mon May 04 1987 14:02 | 4 |
| I don't think he would ever come out from behind the toilet long
enough to meet a REAL woman (of the feline variety of course!) ;^)
Jo
|
557.16 | Progesterone | BUFFER::HOFFMAN | | Thu May 07 1987 14:53 | 15 |
| Ref. .10
One summer, Munchkin started to pull his fur out due to an unaltered
male who came into the neighborhood and wreaked havoc with the pecking
order. Anyway, he was on progesterone for about 6 months. The
only change I noticed was that he became a little pudgy (fluid
retention?), and also he developed small breasts! Oh well, when
you weigh in at 14 pounds or so, who can tell, right? The vet told
me that as long as the swelling was contained around his nipples,
that it was merely a reaction to the female hormone in his system.
Just thought I'd mention it, so you can keep an eye on him.
J.
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