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Old November 30th 08, 01:27 PM posted to rec.pets.cats.health+behav
Angela[_2_]
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Posts: 9
Default Cat diagnosed with renal failure


"Phil P." wrote in message
...
| Judging from the compassion in your post, I think he may want to be around
| you for just a bit longer.
|
|
|
| If anyone has been through this I would appreciate some thoughts?
|
|
| Regarding food- Cats are attracted to food by smell more than taste. You
can
| make any diet smell and taste much more palatable simply by warming it up
a
| bit. Warmed food is much more aromatic and might entice him to eat a diet
he
| otherwise wouldn't touch. Be careful to only warm the food to about body
| temperature- don't cook it or it will smell and taste worse.
|
| For canned food, try mixing in a little warm water- just enough to make it
a
| gruel not a soup. Break the loaf down by mashing it with the bottom of a
| spoon and stir well. I don't recommend dry food for a cat in CRF (or any
| cat)- but if that's all he'll eat- you have no choice. Its very important
he
| keeps eating. If you must feed him dry food, you can warm that too by
| putting 1/4 cup in a small Rubbermaid container and placing the container
in
| very warm water for a few minutes. You'll smell the difference as soon as
| you open the lid. One important note: Try the warming technique with a
| kidney-friendly diet *first*. Just as warming will make a kidney-friendly
| diet more aromatic and palatable- warming will make a regular cat food
even
| more appealing so that he won't find the kidney-friendly diet as appealing
| when you try to switch him over.
|
| As far as diets, I recommend Hill's Prescription Diet g/d-- not k/d. K/d
is
| too low in protein for a cat in early-to-midstage CRF. Protein shouldn't
be
| restricted until his BUN reaches 60-80 mg/dl.
|
| Another good diet for early-to-midstage CRF is Iams Veterinary Formulas
| Urinary O - Moderate pH/O/Feline Canned Formula (also available in dry).
| This is the diet I'm feeding my cat. The diet produces an alkaline urine
| which is much easier on the kidneys.
|
| As far as drugs and supplements, I can't recommend a potassium and Omega-3
| fatty acid supplement more highly. These are the two most important
things
| you can do for your cat- even if he won't eat a kidney-friendly diet.
| Omega-3s are renoprotective and together with a potassium supplement has
| slowed the progression of CRF in my cat to a crawl. I recommend them very
| highly.
|
| I also highly recommend speaking to your vet about Amlodipine-its a
calcium
| channel blocker that will keep your cat's blood pressure in check. Cats
| with CRF are prone to hypertension- even in the early stages.
Hypertension
| can come on quickly in cats with CRF and result in acute blindness and
| further kidney damage. I were you, I would ask your vet to put your cat
on
| Amlodipine *now*. Even if your cat's blood pressure is presently normal,
| Amlodipine won't cause hypotension or any other adverse effects. In fact
| you'll probably notice an improvement in his appetite and activity level-
| even his personality! If your vet wants more information before
| prescribing Amlodipine, give him the following journal references:
|
| Evaluation of the antihypertensive agent amlodipine besylate in
normotensive
| cats and a cat with systemic hypertension.
| Snyder PS
| J Vet Intern Med 53:1166-1169, 1994.
|
| Treatment of systemic hypertension in cats with amlodipine besylate.
| Henik RA, Snyder PS, Volk LM
| JAAHA 33:226-234, 1997.
| Best of luck & Keep the faith!
|
| Phil


Thanks Phil that's extremely helpful and made me feel much more positive.
My Vet called me on Saturday, seems like he is concentrating his urine to
some extent though it's far from normal. He has protein in his urine but he
also has blood so she wants to treat him for an infection first and then re
test his urine as the infection may be the cause for the protein. So he's
now on antibiotics.

She is keen just to get him eating again, she really doesn't want to worry
about what he eats at the moment. I have been giving him chicken the last 2
days and he's actually eating much better, but he tends to do this for a
couple of days then he goes off again. Fingers crossed just treating his
urinary tract infect will make him feel a bit better.

Thanks for the positive words.

Angela