If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Hairball problem?
My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last
night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
After the last bout a little while ago - of throwing up the hair masses, see
if she now acts fine, including eating & everything. If so, that was her problem: a hairball that needed to come up, & finally did. Cathy -- "Staccato signals of constant information..." ("The Boy in the Bubble") Paul Simon "Kris" wrote in message ... My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
After the last bout a little while ago - of throwing up the hair masses, see
if she now acts fine, including eating & everything. If so, that was her problem: a hairball that needed to come up, & finally did. Cathy -- "Staccato signals of constant information..." ("The Boy in the Bubble") Paul Simon "Kris" wrote in message ... My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Thanks Laura. I do brush her but probably not as often as I should.
I will definitely get her in somewhere tomorrow if she's not better. She's under my bed right now recovering from her latest bout of vomiting. I hope the fireworks tonight don't make her sicker. "Laura R." wrote in message .net... circa Fri, 04 Jul 2003 22:33:26 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, Kris ) said, My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. What you describe is pretty typical for my cats when they're bringing up a hairball. As far as prevention of hairballs, the best thing to do is brush the cat regularly. Daily is good. The more hair that ends up in the brush, the less hair ends up in the cat's tummy. Laura |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Thanks Laura. I do brush her but probably not as often as I should.
I will definitely get her in somewhere tomorrow if she's not better. She's under my bed right now recovering from her latest bout of vomiting. I hope the fireworks tonight don't make her sicker. "Laura R." wrote in message .net... circa Fri, 04 Jul 2003 22:33:26 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, Kris ) said, My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. What you describe is pretty typical for my cats when they're bringing up a hairball. As far as prevention of hairballs, the best thing to do is brush the cat regularly. Daily is good. The more hair that ends up in the brush, the less hair ends up in the cat's tummy. Laura |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
My five-year-old cat was vomiting with increasing regularity a few months
ago. I started him on Petromalt, a flavored petroleum jelly hairball remedy, and this seems to have cleared up the problem completely. Pet stores, Targets, Wal-Marts etc. all have a variety of these petroleum jelly-based "medicines." My cat doesn't like the flavor (of course), so I rubbed it onto his paw, per the directions. I did two weeks of a one-inch ribbon each day. I saw results immediately. He vomited only once in that first two weeks, it was only a bit of spittle, and his feces look fine. Now I give him a 3/4-inch ribbon twice a week. I brush him down once a day, too. He seems completely cured. The Internet has reports that Vaseline petroleum jelly works just as well, typically suggesting one put a dollop on the cat's nose. I see one site also states pats of butter work, too. See http://home.stny.rr.com/carmon/Vomit.htm . The mechanism appears to be simply lubricating the fur the kitty has swallowed so it passes more readily through its "plumbing." Please post an update. :-) "Kris" wrote My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
My five-year-old cat was vomiting with increasing regularity a few months
ago. I started him on Petromalt, a flavored petroleum jelly hairball remedy, and this seems to have cleared up the problem completely. Pet stores, Targets, Wal-Marts etc. all have a variety of these petroleum jelly-based "medicines." My cat doesn't like the flavor (of course), so I rubbed it onto his paw, per the directions. I did two weeks of a one-inch ribbon each day. I saw results immediately. He vomited only once in that first two weeks, it was only a bit of spittle, and his feces look fine. Now I give him a 3/4-inch ribbon twice a week. I brush him down once a day, too. He seems completely cured. The Internet has reports that Vaseline petroleum jelly works just as well, typically suggesting one put a dollop on the cat's nose. I see one site also states pats of butter work, too. See http://home.stny.rr.com/carmon/Vomit.htm . The mechanism appears to be simply lubricating the fur the kitty has swallowed so it passes more readily through its "plumbing." Please post an update. :-) "Kris" wrote My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
"Caliban" wrote in message
rthlink.net... My five-year-old cat was vomiting with increasing regularity a few months ago. I started him on Petromalt, a flavored petroleum jelly hairball remedy, and this seems to have cleared up the problem completely. Pet stores, Targets, Wal-Marts etc. all have a variety of these petroleum jelly-based "medicines." My cat doesn't like the flavor (of course), so I rubbed it onto his paw, per the directions. I did two weeks of a one-inch ribbon each day. I saw results immediately. He vomited only once in that first two weeks, it was only a bit of spittle, and his feces look fine. Now I give him a 3/4-inch ribbon twice a week. I brush him down once a day, too. He seems completely cured. The Internet has reports that Vaseline petroleum jelly works just as well, typically suggesting one put a dollop on the cat's nose. The hairball remedies Petromalt and Laxatone (basically the same thing as Petromalt) - are both just petroleum jelly (Vaseline), with flavor added. If you have the molasses flavored kind that you cat doesn't like, try & see if you can find the fish-flavored variety, in case that's a bigger hit w/ him. Cathy -- "Staccato signals of constant information..." ("The Boy in the Bubble") Paul Simon I see one site also states pats of butter work, too. See http://home.stny.rr.com/carmon/Vomit.htm . The mechanism appears to be simply lubricating the fur the kitty has swallowed so it passes more readily through its "plumbing." Please post an update. :-) |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
"Caliban" wrote in message
rthlink.net... My five-year-old cat was vomiting with increasing regularity a few months ago. I started him on Petromalt, a flavored petroleum jelly hairball remedy, and this seems to have cleared up the problem completely. Pet stores, Targets, Wal-Marts etc. all have a variety of these petroleum jelly-based "medicines." My cat doesn't like the flavor (of course), so I rubbed it onto his paw, per the directions. I did two weeks of a one-inch ribbon each day. I saw results immediately. He vomited only once in that first two weeks, it was only a bit of spittle, and his feces look fine. Now I give him a 3/4-inch ribbon twice a week. I brush him down once a day, too. He seems completely cured. The Internet has reports that Vaseline petroleum jelly works just as well, typically suggesting one put a dollop on the cat's nose. The hairball remedies Petromalt and Laxatone (basically the same thing as Petromalt) - are both just petroleum jelly (Vaseline), with flavor added. If you have the molasses flavored kind that you cat doesn't like, try & see if you can find the fish-flavored variety, in case that's a bigger hit w/ him. Cathy -- "Staccato signals of constant information..." ("The Boy in the Bubble") Paul Simon I see one site also states pats of butter work, too. See http://home.stny.rr.com/carmon/Vomit.htm . The mechanism appears to be simply lubricating the fur the kitty has swallowed so it passes more readily through its "plumbing." Please post an update. :-) |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Laxatone, or PetroMalt, are available at
your vet's. Inexpensive, and a more standard hairball treatment than the Purina routine. Always keep some on hand. If it is hairballs, more often than not, they are ok, once they get the hairball up. I'd definitely have any cat that didn't return to normal by morning to the vet. "Kris" wrote in message ... Thanks Laura. I do brush her but probably not as often as I should. I will definitely get her in somewhere tomorrow if she's not better. She's under my bed right now recovering from her latest bout of vomiting. I hope the fireworks tonight don't make her sicker. "Laura R." wrote in message .net... circa Fri, 04 Jul 2003 22:33:26 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, Kris ) said, My 4-year old kitty has thrown up 3 times today. This morning it was last night's food. A couple of hours later it was a clear, thick liquid. Just a few minutes ago it was 2 lumps of brown stuff that looked like matted hair. Since this is July 4th, my vet isn't in but hopefully will be tomorrow. I give her the Purina hairball treats once a week according to the directions but I know that's not the cure-all for hairballs. Is there anything else I can give her until I can get her into the vet? She hasn't drank any water all day from what I can tell and she hasn't eaten any food. She hides for a couple of hours after she's thrown up then is her usual affectionate self until she throws up again. So, I'm thinking this is not an emergency vet situation. However, if my vet doesn't have his usual Saturday hours tomorrow, then I'll take her to the emergency vet. Thanks for any help or advice. What you describe is pretty typical for my cats when they're bringing up a hairball. As far as prevention of hairballs, the best thing to do is brush the cat regularly. Daily is good. The more hair that ends up in the brush, the less hair ends up in the cat's tummy. Laura |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
OT--Unbelieveable solution to car problem | Karen Chuplis | Cat anecdotes | 14 | December 14th 04 12:38 AM |
Hairball | Christina Websell | Cat anecdotes | 30 | October 19th 04 10:40 PM |