T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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849.1 | | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | Kitty City | Fri Jan 06 1995 09:58 | 34 |
| Arlene,
Never once did I think you should give up on the poor guy.
I do have a few suggestions...but you also might want to discuss
this with your vet too because they all have different of opinions:
o If he is still on KD...try mixing some low protein cat food
(Friskie Senior or Kal-Kan Optimum) in with the KD. Ziggy
wouldn't touch the KD...so I figured it was best to eat
something so after talking to my vet we decided we would just
try to keep him on a low protein (under 9%)
o Add a little bit of beef or chicken broth to the food. Even
if the broth is a bit salty...that should be okay because it
will make Marvin drink more and that's what he needs to keep
the kidney going. (check the protein level on the broth???)
o Have you attempted to warm up the food in the microwave. Some
cats love this...while others hate it. (don't make it hot...just
slightly warm)
If Marvin isn't eating at all...I personally would resort to
anything he would eat at this time and then you can try to ween
him back on the special food. Try baby food...or slice chicken
because both of those are pretty low in protein.
I would also let your vet know he is not eating so well since
he was on the heart medicine...because maybe the dose is just two
large.
Hugs to Marvin......
Sandy
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849.2 | | ASABET::BRIGGS | | Fri Jan 06 1995 10:28 | 15 |
| arlene;
i just lost my midnight to kidney failure in june. he was 17. two
years ago my vet said that he had about 2months. i started to feed him
ground turkey. i would fry a little in the frying pan with a bit of
butter and he would love it. this became his daily diet, until i intro-
duced him to wiskas poultry canned cat food. small cans 3/1.00 . it
has very low protein 8-9% and it smells good. i believe that this kept
him alive for a whole year and half. i used to bring him in three times
a week for fluids and my vet could not believe how he just kept hanging
on.
jeane
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849.3 | More ideas | UHUH::TALCOTT | | Fri Jan 06 1995 10:40 | 20 |
| Mostly mentioned elsewhere in the conference but what-the-heck...
When our liver-failure cat stopped eating we spiked his food with bits of
cheese. Our bazillion-year-old clinic cat (actually 18 or so) lost her appetite
a couple of years ago. Cheese bits did the trick for a while, and then I had to
move to cheese bits & steak. She likes it barbecued (guess who's out in the back
yard at the "barbie" all winter long ;-). Sometimes we have luck with
meat-containing baby food or chicken when cats won't eat anything else. A more
"classic" approach would be A/D, available from your vet. It looks a lot like
baby food & is supposed to contain an appetite stimulant, though I have to admit
I don't think I've ever seen it work. If absolutely nothing else works, small
doses of valium make for a ravenous appetite, but that's typically a pretty
drastic measure as doping up your cat twice a day to get them to eat is treading
on that Quality of Life issue. And is the steak & cheese "bad" for them? - well,
less good than cat food, but then if life may not last that much longer why not
enjoy it to the fullest? When my dog suddenly came down with aggressive cancer
and had a month to live, he spent that month pigging out on steaks, ice cream,
pizza and was a frequent visitor at the Dunkin Donuts drive-up window. He begged
and put weight on like crazy, but he loved every minute of it.
Trace
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849.4 | Sounds like... | LJSRV2::FALLON | | Fri Jan 06 1995 10:53 | 5 |
| Another drug to use instead of the valium to induce a desire to eat, is
ceproheptdyn (sp?). I have used it with great succes from little
weanlings to big old Stinky. My vet once told me they give it to human
babies for the same thing. Not too sure about anything else with it.
Karen
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849.5 | | HELIX::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Jan 06 1995 12:08 | 10 |
| to add to Sandy's comment about heatingthe food inthe microwave. This
applys to dry food as well. My Eirene wouldn't touch K/D canned; as for
the K/D dry she wouldn't look at that either until someone suggested
sprinking water on it and putting it in the microwave to soften (and
making sure that she smelled the aroma). I did have to let it cool for
a bit before giving it to her, though.
good luck. I know what you are are going through.
Deb
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849.6 | my older kitty LIKES K/D dry food | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Jan 06 1995 13:05 | 8 |
| JFCl won't touch the K/D canned food, but she likes the dry stuff, and
the kitten doesn't, so they more or less are each eating the proper
food (I only buy low-protein canned food now - vet says the kitten is
old enough, and there was no way to stop the elderly cat from getting
into the kitten food otherwise). I think cats start to lose their
sense of smell when they get real old (JFCL is 17).
/Charlotte
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849.7 | Try dry yeast flakes | DPDMAI::WHITEA | | Tue Jan 10 1995 09:41 | 11 |
| Hi guys,
I've been read-only for about the past year, but now I have a
suggestion for getting kitties to eat. Sheba is my 9-month-old, and
she goes thru phases when she gets tired of certain foods, and refuses
to eat. Well, after several brands of cat food, I was running out of
options, and my vet suggested sprinkling yeast flakes (ummm, yummm) or
lightly sprinkling food over Sheba's food. Apparently, any brand of
yeast you buy in the grocery store will do, and Sheba loves it!!
Good luck!!
Amanda
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849.8 | | TOOK::GASKELL | | Wed Jan 11 1995 07:33 | 4 |
| Another taste some cats love is garlic. Try a little crushed garlic
and see if that works -- it's also a good tonic.
Best of luck with Marvin and wish you both well.
|
849.9 | Words of caution... | QE010::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Wed Jan 11 1995 09:18 | 19 |
| If you are feeding your cat a particularly less than palatable
food for a medical reason, you need to be sure that anything you
add to that food will not negate the benefits of feeding that
food. Check with your vet before adding anything.
For example, I now have to feed Simon KD, since he forms
calcium oxalate crystals in his urine. I need to be sure to
restrict his calcium intake. Before adding *anything* to the
KD, I would want to know the mineral content of whatever I
intended to add.
KD is a known to be rather bland, with the canned version being
even more so (or so the vet tells me, I haven't tried it myself ;^)
Although Simon and Hannah are not fond of it - Hannah keeps hoping
for something better, since *she's* not the one who's on a restricted
diet - it's all that's served, so if they're hungry, that's the choice.
Kathy
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849.10 | SOMETHING ELSE TO TRY | CSLALL::MHOLMES | | Thu Jan 12 1995 08:18 | 5 |
| I had success with adding a little clam juice to my cat's food. It's
available in any supermarket, but, of course, always check with the Vet
first. Good luck to yu and your litle furry face.
Marilyn and Tigger
|