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#1
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Cat barfing question
Or more accurately, Barfing Cat Question. Our two males are nine years old now, and throw up (naturally, only on the carpet) from time to time. Not all that often, perhaps once every 3-4 weeks. One cat does it more than the other. They eat Iams kibble exclusively.
The vomitus never seems to contain any hair, so it does not seem to be hair-ball caused. I've asked the vet each time they get an exam, and she just smiles condescendingly at me. Yeah, I know most cats do this, but the stuff is really a dark brown and our rug is off white, so unless we catch it soon afterwards, it is a big job getting the stains out. Edit: Oh, yeah, they both are indoor only cats. Is there any medication or anything else we could give them that might prevent this endearing habit?
Last edited by KlondikeGeoff; 02-17-2007 at 01:07 PM. |
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#2
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I think you need a new vet.I would start with a hairball remedy regardless.After that,try a different food.
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#3
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Petromalt and Nutrimalt.
Cat grass, as in fresh green growing oat or wheat grass in a small container. It is still likely hairball related. Unless they eat too fast?
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I am not a real Doctor |
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#4
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If you don't brush your cats regularly, start doing it a couple times a week. All the hair that ends up in the brush is hair that won't end up in the cat.
Cats, God bless 'em, are damn fools about eating any little thing they find. They'll eat bits of thread, spiders, buttons, earring backs, you name it. Some of that junk makes them vomit, so it's really hard for a vet to diagnose occasional puking. If a cat is barfing up everything he eats for more than a day, that's something to see the vet about.
__________________
Time is a paper frog. It won't croak, and it won't jump, even if you wind it. Do you believe it will catch paper flies? How about fly paper? |
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#5
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When my Z barfs, it's usually because I've come home a few hours late and fed her a full scoop all at once. She'll gobble up every last bit, and then 15 minutes later it comes back up. When she's extra hungry I have to remember just to give her a little bit of food to start, and let her digest a bit before feeding her the rest.
That's probably not the problem here, but I offer it as a suggestion anyway. |
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#6
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Quote:
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#7
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Like others have mentioned, cats barf from hairballs that don't always come up with the barf. Hairball barfs tend to be bile only, and come up when all the other food is out odf the stomach. Eating-too-fast barfs tend to bring up food.
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#8
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My cat barfs (after eating too fast) only if I forget to give her the hairball remedy. If she's had the remedy recently, she can eat as fast as she wants without barfing.
Last edited by Enter the Flagon; 02-17-2007 at 10:45 PM. |
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#9
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Petromalt comes in both malt and tuna flavors. There's also a competing product called Laxatone that comes in a tuna flavor. I don't have to resort to any tricks to get my cat to take the tuna-flavored stuff - she just licks it off my finger.
Brushing also helps prevent hairballs. Most cats enjoy a good brushing, and you'd be amazed at the amount of loose fur you can remove. |
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#10
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I used to take Indonesian language tutoring from an Indonesian vet, so we talked about animal health a lot. One time I wanted to say in Indonesian that "sometimes, cats throw up for no particular reason." A grammatical Indonesian sentence for this is:
Kadang-kadang kucing-kucing mentah-mentah. Now THAT's a sentence. (Sadly, however, honesty compels me to note that as a more knowledgeable speaker I now know that you don't really need to say "kucing-kucing," you would most likely just say "kucing." But you COULD say kucing-kucing, it's grammatical.) |
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#11
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There is a spectrum of "ease of vomiting". Cats vomit very easily. Dogs are intermediate. Horses and rabbits are unable to vomit. In addition to the other advice offered; a diet high in fiber will help some cats vomit less frequently, as will changes in husbandry practices that lead to slower ingestion.
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#12
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Thanks for all the advice, I'll try the Nutrimalt. I have always brushed the critters daily, maybe will try 2x/day. |
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#14
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#15
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So, today I got a tube of Petromalt (fish flavor). Not only some posters here, but also the salesperson told me cats just loooove to lap the stuff of your fingers. Think ours will? Of course not. They took one sniff, turned up their noses (one nose per cat, that is) and walked away. I followed the old rule and smeared some of the glop on their paws. Once guy licked it off immediately, making faces. The other guy ran all around the house on three legs, shaking the afflicted paw now and then. He would then stop, open his mouth, put out his tongue to lick, but as soon as he smelled it, he started three-legging it again. After about an hour, he finally sat down and lapped it off. Certainly made for an entertaining interlude. Will try it again tomorrow, but probably won't be able to catch them. So it goes in the wonderful world of cats. |
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#17
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The amazing thing with a cat (and probably other animals too except humans) is that they can throw up and then go back and continue eating the food that they just vomited.
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#18
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I have learned two major things with my cats.
1) Do not feed them crappy cat food with high ash content or they will piss blood at one point in their life. I lost a shirt to this. I checked the internets and bought Iams from there on in. 2) Flush your toilet twice to minimize the amount of bacteria they will inevitably drink and then puke all over your house. It is only water. The planet is covered in it. It will recycle itself. That is what our planet does. Or just leave the seat down. That is all I have to say about that. |
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#19
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Does your cat nibble on house plants? Mine does, and invariably vomits. He's especially fond of dracaena and spider plants. He also vomits after chewing on the straw of a broom.
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#20
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I hear ya on the cats munching on EVERYTHING remotely hair-like.
Drives me nuts. Dryer lint, hair they rip out of each other, dust bunnies, what have you. I have to keep my Oriental rug fringe covered in bitter apple. What is it in their tiny brains that drives them to do this? *shakes fist* |
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#21
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KlondikeGeoff they do have other flavors if your three-legged hopper detests the tuna flavor. I know Laxatone brand has an "original" flavor that some cats like. It's red, as opposed to the blue packaging on the tuna flavor. I have no idea what it's supposed to be flavored, most likely a generic "meat."
My cats go crazy for tuna laxatone, so I haven't tried the other flavors. You could try smearing it on their noses, as they hate stuff on their noses too. |
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#22
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Heh, I'll try the nose bit tomorrow. |
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#23
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My feline bottomless pit will scarf as many as he can scam off me and take away from my Picky Eater. My Picky Eater will grudgingly eat one.
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#24
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Petromalt tastes like Malt and many cats like it. Some will lick it off my fingers greddily, other require the first couple of doses be rubbed into their mouth. Get them to open their mouth a tad, then wipe your finger in- some will go inside the rest around the mouth, but they'll lick that off.
Nutrimalt - according to every cat I know- just plain tastes a lot better, and I will sometime cover Petromalt with a thin layer of Nutrimalt- they'll start licking the Nutri and then finish the Preto as they have a similar flavor. Last edited by DrDeth; 02-19-2007 at 05:18 PM. |
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