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Question

cat 7yrs suddenly stopped having bowel movements in litter pan. This started about 1yr and a half ago. She cries when she has a movement and does not try to hide it. The stool is very dry and hard. We took her to the vet when it began and there was nothing unusual with her stool other than it was very dry. She is your ordinary domestic cat other than we rescused her and her mom and brother 7ys ago. She has a very think coat. The vet put her on vet solutions hairball preparation. At first it softened the stool a little but it no longer works. We did not keep her on it all this time. We have tried everything we could think of including changing the litter with no luck. Do you have any suggestions?

Submitted: 19 days and 6 hours ago.
Category: Cat
Value: $15
Status: CLOSED
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Already Tried:
Bet solutions hairball Preparation more wet food less dry change litter

Posted by Terri Riba 19 days and 3 hours ago.

Answer

Dear friend,

 

I am sorry your girl is having trouble.

 

Feed her only wet food - no dry as it is constipating. Once her stools become normal she will use her box.

 

The best natural laxative is milk. It should bring on a BM in two hours or less. Older cats are often calcium deficient leading to hard dry stools.

Give her one to three ounces right away and every day.

Most constipation is due to inadequate fluid in the bowel so your baby should eat food with a bit of water added to prevent this in the future.

If she is not diabetic, she can have droppers of unflavored pediayte to hydrate her and balance her electrolytes.

Yes, you can also put vaseline on her paws for her to lick off or lipoderm:

http://reviews.1800petmeds.com/1800/prod2713/lipiderm-reviews/reviews.htm

 

The average is one to two bowel movements a day. However, a cat can manage as long as they have a good defecation every other day. Any longer than that and the stool can become toxic in her system.

Most constipation is caused by inadequate fluid and fiber in the colon. A high fiber diet should help as long as she eats it.Never feed Science diet as it not a great food - vets push it because they sell it but there are much better ones.

 

http://www.naturalbalanceinc.com/catformulas/allergy.html

These brands below, are well-recommended and contain nothing artificial, plus, contain meat as the first, or within the first three ingredients:

Wellness (http://www.oldmotherhubbard.com/

Felidae (http://www.canidae.com/

Innova (http://www.naturapet.com/display.php?d=inn-home

Newman's Own Organics (http://www.newmansownorganics.com/pet/home/

Natural Balance (http://www.naturalbalanceinc.com/catformulas/NB_CatCanned.html

 

A natural remedy is canned pumpkin (not pie filling) a teaspoon a day added to her food. Some people also give an ounce of milk daily as most older cats are calcium deficient.There are also several vet scipted drugs like lactulose and cipracide. The problem with laxatives and enemas are the same with humans. These artificial stimulants interfere with the normal peristaltic waves of the intestine and repeated use can cause further constipation, obstipation and even megacolon.

Please refer to the following links and info:

"The causes of constipation and obstipation are many, including diet (ingested hair, foreign bodies, bones); environment (a dirty litter box, lack of exercise, hospitalization); painful defecation (anal abscesses from cat-fight bites or feces- matted hair [long-haired cats are particularly susceptible]); obstructions (tumors and improperly healed pelvic fractures that restrict movement through the intestines); and medications (for other conditions). And watch your cat's weight. Obese cats can become constipated.

Chronic constipation and obstipation from specific causes can result in a distended colon that has poor movement (megacolon). Sometimes, though, megacolon occurs when the muscular movement of the colon wall, which propels fecal material through the colon, diminishes for some unknown reason. As a result, fecal matter comes remains in the colon where it becomes drier and harder. Over time, the enlarged, impacted colon loses most of its muscular ability (motility) and becomes a loose pouch filled with dry, concrete like material. Unfortunately, veterinary science has yet to discover the causes of this condition known as idiopathic megacolon."

Here is the rest of the article:SOURCE:

http://pets1st.ca/articles/00046ConstipationAndYourCat.asp

Here are others I think will be helpful:

http://www.marvistavet.com/html/body_constipation_and_megacolon.html

http://www.petshealth.com/dr_library/felconstip.html

http://marvistavet.com/html/constipation_and_megacolon.html

 

Please let me know how she is doing. I will always be here for both of you.

I hope she feels better very soon.

Sincerest best wishes,

Terri

19 days and 2 hours ago.

Reply

Thank you for your reply. You have good suggestions and we will try them, one at a time. I did worry that the vaseline or petroleum in the hairball solution would not be good for her on a regular basis. I did neglect to mention she is strickley an indoor with limited exercise other than my massages and playing with a colorful cat string toy that I wave around for her. We do have a large home with a lanai for her to go out on so I know she has plenty of room. She sees our vet yearly and we did even seek the advice of another vet. Same response - he prescribed vet solutions hairball prevention.

 

I did try milk but she refused so I'm thinking of putting a little in an syringe and seeing what happens.

 

After a rectal exam at the vets' she spontaneously evacuates.

 

We did just adopt a five month old kitten from a rescue league so I hope that will not complicat Molley's problem, although she has had this condition for some time now.

 

Thank you for your suggestions. I will let you know the results.

Accepted Answer

Hi there,

 

Daily vaseline or laxatone will not hurt Molly.

 

You can also try inserting a thermometer in her anus for a minute when she is constipated.

 

I dont think the kitten will cause any problems for Molly.

 

Yes, give her milk by syringe if she wont drink it.

 

It is my pleasure to help someone as lovely as you and your sweet baby.

 

I will always be here for both of you.

 

Thank you for pressing accept.

 

Best wishes,

Terri

 

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Expert: Terri Riba
Pos. Feedback: 99.9 %
Accepts: 
Answered: 11/2/2009

Feline Healthcare Expert

Expert in feline health and behavior. 20 years experience with cats.

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