T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1843.1 | For what it's worth | VAXWRK::LEVINE | | Mon Oct 10 1988 14:40 | 16 |
|
I don't think that a kitten that young should be allowed to continue
having diarrhea for so long because they can easily get dehydrated
and I'm surprised that your vet is not concerned about it.
If the kitten likes wet food, try mixing half wet food and half boiled
white rice (mash the rice with the food so it's easier to eat). If
she still doesn't like it, experiment with ratios of food to rice
until you find something she likes.
If the kitten has worms, it won't necessarily show up in the first
stool sample so you might try another one. Although if it were me,
I'd either have the vet physically check the kitten out again or
take her to another vet.
Pam
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1843.2 | first, see vet - then try quality food | SKITZD::WILDE | Time and Tide wait for Norman | Mon Oct 10 1988 15:18 | 32 |
| You should be concerned...dehydration is life-threatening for a small
animal or child.
IF THE VET FINDS NO ILLNESS OR PARASITES....
and you should have the kitten in for a full checkup....then you must deal
with food allergies....I have the problem, so I can offer these tidbits of
advice:
Switch to Science Diet for kittens and nursing cats (yes, it is expensive,
but has no dyes and is made with only quality food products, and your
kitten will still be getting wet food)....I pay approx. $1.15/16 oz. can
of it, but the cats eat less and remain healthy so I think it isn't
really that expensive in the long run.
MAKE SURE the kitten is not getting to ANY MILK or other milk products
(maybe a loving roommate is slipping the kitten a "goodie" when giving
the other kitten some?) - most kittens cannot digest cow or goat milk
products and get diarrhea....
feed only quality foods - Iams or Science Diet are some brand names to
try - you must avoid unnecessary additives like dyes and stuff and the
supermarket foods have lots of additives to make YOU think the food is
neat...I recommend gradually changing the kitten to dry kibble only
due to the dental problems that cats fed wet food have....it is costly
to get the cats's teeth taken care of each year. I would add dry
kibble to the moist food, then gradually reduce the amount of moist
food until feeding only dry food - Iams dry seems to work well with my
sensitive-stomached cats....reduces litter odor ALOT as well.
Most important - if this vet doesn't care....get another one!!! You
must insist on an attentive vet.
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1843.3 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Oct 10 1988 15:34 | 3 |
| I'd good to another vet, and soon. Dehydration is serious. It
doesn't sound like your current vet is suitable.
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1843.4 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Mon Oct 10 1988 18:02 | 26 |
| I think it's premature to bash the vet. I can't tell from .0 whether
the vet was called at the beginning of the two week period, or later.
If it's when the symptoms first appeared, I can well imagine the
vet saying "try this and that, and if it isn't cured, then bring
the kitten in." I don't believe vets should encourage unnecessary
office visits when home remedies are still reasonable. Now that
two weeks have gone by, it's definitely time to contact the vet
again.
Also, there's diarrhea and there's Montezuma's Revenge. Soft stools
accompanied by gas are certainly a bad sign that should be treated, but
that's not quite the same as losing water with the bowel movement. If
no liquid is being passed, and if the kitten is drinking adequate
amounts of water, then dehydration is merely an important
consideration, not a cause for panic. If, on the other hand, there really
is water with the stool, then it is difficult for the kitten to drink
enough water to replace what was lost, so dehydration becomes a very
serious issue. In any event, make sure the kitten has drinking water
available at all times.
Don't be surprised if the vet can't find anything wrong; diarrhea is
frequently related to diet. The answer might just be that you need to
be a little more patient with the hamburger and rice, and then switch
to a different brand of wet food.
Gary
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1843.5 | Thanks for the help | VICKI::BOULANGER | | Tue Oct 11 1988 09:25 | 25 |
|
I want to thank all of you for your suggestions.
I haven't given my kitten any milk and as far as I know my roommate
hasn't either. That is one thing I heard that kittens get sick
when they have milk. I am leaving plenty of water for the kitten
which she does drink plenty of. I tried mixing the hamburg and
rice with the wet food and she licked all the wet food and left
the hamburg and rice there. I think she has her mind set on not
eating people food.
I will try the suggestion about getting the Science Diet and mixing
IAMS in with it. I don't mind spending the money if it's going
to make her feel better.
As far as the vet goes, he seemed pretty nice and he did say if
I thought I needed to bring her in again to give him a call.
He didn't seem to have alot of suggestions on a diet though. I
knew I could depend on the notes file for help on that.
I Thank all of you again for your suggestions. I'll let you all
know how I make out with the science diet and IAMS.
Michelle
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1843.6 | Boiled chicken | CHEFS::GOUGH | | Tue Oct 11 1988 11:31 | 13 |
| When Oliver was a little (5/6 weeks) kitten, he had constant diarrhoea.
This was because he had been neglected before I got him, and
consequently his stomach could not cope with normal cat food - it
was too rich.
The vet told me to feed him exclusively on boiled chicken, until he settled
down. I did this, and it worked - just ordinary chicken (human
type) boiled until cooked and (of course) picked carefully off the
bones. He loved it.
I'd still go back to the vet though, just to be on the safe side.
Helen.
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1843.7 | Beef & Rice for Coconut | MISFIT::ABRAMS | Bill from Rochester, NY | Tue Oct 11 1988 18:23 | 14 |
| Our fifth addition, Coconut, had the same problem. The beef & rice
method worked for us. It needed to be the ONLY food given to her --
she got hungry enough after a day -- and once she stabilized, then
we had to try four different food brands until one worked...
The other four thought the food games were fun!
By the way, it takes about two days for the beef & rice to start
working.
Good luck!
Bill (5 indoor and 5 outdoor cat kids)
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1843.8 | | SUBURB::TUDORK | SCEADUGENGA | Mon Oct 17 1988 13:46 | 8 |
| I mix Whiskas with a sprinkling of Weetabix for our kittens.
I also give them condensed milk diluted with water to the consistency
of normal milk. Once they are weaned they continue on this to about
6 months when I cut out the Weetabix and switch to water. This
is the diet that the RSPCA give their kittens and as such seems
fine.
Kate
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