| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 921.1 |  | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Eight Tigers on My Couch | Thu Aug 03 1995 17:04 | 16 | 
|  |     Karen,
    
    Science Diet Light Maintenance is pretty high in fiber.  I have
    Carrie on it for her chronic colitis.  Perhaps it would help
    the little guy.  Actually, maybe you could mix it with Science
    Diet Growth formula so he'd get the higher fiber as well as the
    higher kitten food calories.
    
    I've done something similar with mine.  I've mixed the light
    maintenance with the regular maintenance so that Carrie still gets
    her higher fiber food and the others get a few extra calories since
    they don't have colitis or need their weight controlled.  When you're
    feeding 8 cats in a sitting it's hard to separate everyone out to
    different places for different foods.
    
    Jan
 | 
| 921.2 |  | KAMALA::DREYER | More great memories | Thu Aug 03 1995 18:26 | 7 | 
|  | 	When Buki was a kitten and had very loose stool, my vet had me mix
	Metamucil in with canned cat food.  It's very high fiber, and does
	not just work as a laxative as many people assume.  It works as a 
	regulator to adjust too loose *or* too hard stools.  Speak to your vet
	about this and see if she (he) agrees.
	Laura
 | 
| 921.3 | Is He an Over Eager Eater? | PCBUOA::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Fri Aug 04 1995 05:59 | 21 | 
|  |     
    Persistent loose bowels in a kitten showing no other signs of pathology
    is often a consequence of ...
    
    OVEREATING!
    
    Really - I don't know if it applies in this case, but Floyd had this
    problem.  As the runt of the litter, he apparently wasn't able to get
    his "fair share" at the banquet, and when I brought him home he was
    just a tiny little bag of bones.  He immediately took advantage of the
    lack of serious competition at the food bowls by eating everything, and
    he had routinely, uhm, soft poops.  And such a big bulging belly that
    the vet thought he had worms, and he got dewormed again!
    
    Once he learned he didn't have to be so "opportunistic", his poop
    firmed up nicely, his tummy's sleeker, and we're all happy campers.
    
    I found this in the Cornell book.
    
    len.
        
 | 
| 921.4 |  | TPSYS::GLADDING |  | Fri Aug 04 1995 10:32 | 7 | 
|  |     Hi there,
    
    Did you try adding canned pumpkin to his food?  That always works
    wonders on the foster kittens that I've had at my house.  I usually
    add 1 tsp. to about 1/2 c. of food.
    
    Pam
 | 
| 921.5 | four kitties in one cottage, over catmax | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Tue Aug 15 1995 12:31 | 11 | 
|  |     Well, after 7-8 days of absolutely nothing but dry WD, his stools
    finally started being normal.  I'm leaving him on WD until his vet
    returns from vacation next week, even though the vet said WD is not
    nutritious enough for a 5 month old kitten, since I think his innards
    need some stability.  He looks great, and thinks Sweetie is a big
    kitty designed to cuddle with (Sweetie has finally gotten used to
    being a cuddlee as well as a cuddler :-) and he and Little Bit chase
    each other all over the house, zoom zoom.  Holly still hisses at him,
    but her heart isn't in it, he can walk by 2-3 inches away without
    getting batted :-)
    
 | 
| 921.6 |  | HELIX::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Aug 15 1995 13:14 | 6 | 
|  |     Karen,
    
    I wonder if you gave him some vitimin supplements (pet tabs, or
    somethign available at the petstore) if that might be helpful. 
    
    Deb
 | 
| 921.7 |  | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Tue Aug 15 1995 13:31 | 5 | 
|  |     Re: .6
    
    I'm going to ask the vet about that.  With 4 cats total, there's a lot
    to be said for not having to enforce separate menus for each one :-)
    
 |