T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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920.1 | WORMS? | NRADM2::PELUSO | | Wed Nov 25 1987 12:04 | 11 |
| When I first got Nippa, she had been on a diet of milk, baby cereal
and tuna (her mommy abandoned her). She had the same problem, and
when I brought her to the vet, she said Nippa had worms. Has T.C.
been checked for worms lately?
michele
p.s.
I had in the intrem started weaning her from her old diet to the
proper diet.
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920.2 | Could he have worms for 6 months and live? | LAIDBK::RESKE | Life's a mystery & I have no clues | Wed Nov 25 1987 12:33 | 12 |
|
No, T.C. hasn't been checked for worms but he's had this problem
since I've had him (6 months). He's stayed with the vet a few weeks
and I would think if it were worms the vet would have caught it.
Would it hurt just to get the Hartz de-wormer and give it to him
anyway? If it were worms, would this clear it up?
I think I'll take a sample to the vet to check just to be safe.
If that's not it, any other suggestions?
Donna
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920.3 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Nov 25 1987 13:09 | 12 |
| dewormers are poison and should only be given if the cat tests positive
for worms. And yes, a cat could live 6 months (or 20 years) with
worms. It seems that round worms can only be detected in a stool
sample during certain stages of the life cycle (eggs and when they
are full grown), and I think that their life cycle is about 3 weeks.
This is why you could bring in a sample, have no worms detected,
and then bring in a sample a week later and find worms. Anyhow,
it cost me $6 for the fecal, board and deworming for Alex at the
vet; they had to worm her twice, and there was no charge for the
second time. I guess what I am trying to say is let the vet do it.
Deb
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920.4 | Try Iams | FIDDLE::GERRY | Go ahead, make me PURRR... | Wed Nov 25 1987 13:20 | 8 |
| What are you feeding your kitty??? My "kids" have terrible problems
with Purina, Crave, and most of the Grocery Store types of foods.
And believe me, this is not a pretty site with a Persian!!! Anyway,
if your kitty won't eat the Science Diet, you might want to try
Iams....most pet stores have free samples.
cin...who's kitty's stools look like rabbit pellets!!
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920.5 | | 10490::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Wed Nov 25 1987 14:20 | 2 |
| Or maybe Hills C/D.
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920.6 | My cats LOVE Iams | MARRHQ::KORCHNAK | | Wed Nov 25 1987 15:54 | 9 |
| Iams worked great with my 2 cats -- haven't had a problem since
they started on it. At first they looked at me when I changed the
food, like "What is this junk?" But after giving them a few bits
of it as a reward (sitting up and taking it from my hand) they LOVED
it! As a matter of fact, the food made them look and feel better!
(Try not letting the cat read the ingredients label on the box/package
of food -- soon as they find out it's GOOD for them, they already
don't like it)
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920.7 | Yogurt treatment for diarrhea | GRECO::MORGAN | Doris Morgan DTN 223-9594 | Fri Nov 27 1987 13:47 | 12 |
| Thanks to the reply that multiple stool samples may be needed to detect
worms. I am still concerned about my new cat and worms. His sample
tested negative. I did find tapeworms later, and he has been treated,
but his poop is still terribly foul-smelling! I'll have him tested
again for roundworms.
By the way, he had continuing diarrhea since I found him. He's also
been on antibiotics for over 5 weeks (urinary infection, then upper
respiratory infection). The vet said his intestinal bacteria had been
suppressed by the antibiotics, so I should feed him plain yogurt to
restore them. It worked! Even though still very smelly, his poop is
solid. And he loves the yogurt!!
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920.8 | NO SCIENCE DIET=NO DIARRHEA | TPVAX3::ROBBINS | | Mon Nov 30 1987 11:49 | 14 |
| I just went through the same thing with my 3. I thought one of
them must have got reinfested with worms and that it had spread
to all 3. I brought in the stools and was told no worms. I was
very confused at that point because they stunk so so bad and they
were starting to get severe diarrhea. Then I noticed that I had
bought a bag of Iams instead of their Science Diet. All of a sudden
everything is back to normal. Then I got in a jam where the only
food I could find was the Science Diet and it took one day for them
to start there stinkies again..... That's enough for me they are
staying on Iams if that's the sort of reaction they have on the
Science Diet. I wonder if the manufacturers of Science Diet are
experimenting with their ingredients....
KIM
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920.9 | | MIGHTY::WILLIAMS | Bryan Williams | Mon Nov 30 1987 12:17 | 12 |
| Odd. When I tried to wean my cats towards Iams, they ALL got sick
and had diarrhea for several days. The Iams people claimed that
"that's normal, it's just taking them time to adjust". After two
weeks of constantly cleaning up regurgutation and emptying very
loose stools, our vet told us that we had better switch back before
they get dehydrated. 24 hours after switching back to Hills, no
problem.
Perhaps cats get used to one type of food, and some of them actively
resist attempts to change?
Bryan
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920.10 | Canned IAMS anywhere? | GLINKA::GREENE | | Mon Nov 30 1987 12:21 | 19 |
| Interesting speculation about whether Science Diet might cause
smelly/unformed stools. I'm having trouble with Kosh, who seems
otherwise in good health and has been checked out by the vet.
Has anyone ever seen any WET (canned) IAMS? I use IAMS kitten
food to start all babies because of its teeny bite-sized pieces,
but use Hills P/D (extra high nutrition; probably causes extra
high odor, ugh) for all kittens and queens, and C/D for the rest
(unless Cosette and Fantine are on diets in which case they
get R/D for reducing: it works like a charm 'cause they won't
eat it! ;-)
Kosh has been on the food for about 2 months now, enough time,
I would have thought, for her to adjust to a change in diet.
But maybe it just doesn't agree with some cats...?
Thanks for the suggestion,
Penelope
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920.11 | the things we do for our cats! | DISSRV::HTAYLOR | Fight malnutrition, GIMME CHOCOLATE! | Tue Dec 01 1987 11:54 | 9 |
| Penelope,
I had the same problem with Tabbatha. She wouldn't eat the
IAMS dry food when I put it down for her. Then I tried this. I
put the food in the Microwave for ~25 sec. It softened it up just
enough so that Tabbatha would eat it. Now that's all I give her
and her coat is really starting to shine! I can't wait until she
is old enough to show!
Holly
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920.12 | Pass the Iams, please... | FIDDLE::GERRY | Go ahead, make me PURRR... | Tue Dec 01 1987 13:15 | 12 |
| I personally feel that cats and kittens do not need "wet" food once
their teeth are strong enough to chew the dry stuff.
Unfortunately in order to break them from the wet food habit, you
have to deal with lots of begging for a week or so.
Your just a softie, Pen...
Purrs
cin...whose "kids" don't really don't care for canned food anymore!!
|
920.13 | ...or try soaking dry food... | HYDRA::LOOMIS | | Wed Dec 02 1987 15:27 | 8 |
| Another way to get them to eat Science Diet dry food that I've found
very successful is to soak it in water to make it soft! Crystal
has been very finicky eating lately and wouldn't touch the dry food,
but soaked it goes almost as fast as the wet-- (doesn't do much
for their teeth, admittedly, but better than a straight "wet food"
diet, I think).
diane
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920.14 | on the road to recovery! | LAIDBK::RESKE | Life's a mystery & I have no clues | Fri Dec 04 1987 18:53 | 14 |
| I thought I would throw and update on the situation in here for
everyone's information. A fellow feline noter in the office who
breeds kittens thought it did sound like worms. She suggested I
go to the pet supply house and pick up some Nemex 2 which is a
worming medicine. It is actually for dogs but she said it was fine
to give to cats too. I gave it to T.C. on monday and he seems to
be getting better. His doodles (Did anyone see 3 men and a baby?)
aren't quite rabbit pellets, but they are a lot better.
Thanks Molly!
Donna
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920.15 | gradual introduction of new food | 30752::WILDE | Imagine all the people.. | Tue Jan 12 1988 16:47 | 16 |
| > I've talked with the vet about it and he doesn't seem concerned.
> He suggested I feed him Science Diet, but T.C. would rather starve
> than eat that stuff. He proved it by not eating for 2 days when
> that was all he was offered. He even turns his nose up to the
> Science Diet wet food. This really amazed me since he is the biggest
> food pig in the world.
Stinky poop is from the food he eats...now, to get him to eat science
diet, add a little bit to his regular food, increasing the ratio gradually
over a week and finally get him to eat science diet only....BTW if he gets
hungry enough, he'll eat....animals may hold out for awhile, but they are
NOT suicidal by nature so they WILL eat as long as the food is not spoiled.
Cats are simply notorious for not liking ANYTHING to change.
Just for the record, my cats were still a little "stinky" with canned
science diet, but the dry only seems to help alot.
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920.16 | Gassy food? | LEAF::C_MILLER | | Fri Jun 29 1990 11:46 | 5 |
| I found that my kitten (8 weeks old) would get terrible gas on
Science Diet wet for kittens. I've since switched her to Friskies for
Kittens and Purina Kitten Chow with a little bit of Iams for kittens
mixed in. The gas has stopped (although a straight side order of
Iams makes the gas return).
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