*One of our cats Madison had horrible food allergies.  She would projectile
vomit... it was terrible.  One time she twisted her intestine she was so
sick (the twist actually required surgery to correct)!  We took her and had
allergy testing done... it was not much money considering what we've
accomplished since then.  When we found out she was allergic to nearly
EVERYTHING... they gave us a list by manufacturer of what she could eat.  I
would suggest doing the allergy test, it's best for your kitty... and in the
long run cheaper for you than trying a ton of medication and office visits.
Madison needed no medication at all... we couldn't be more pleased with the
outcome.*
*Leslie =^..^=*


On 12/31/06, Gary Murphy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 I was also glad to see the Benadryl transdermal cream mentioned by
Michelle, I am anxious to hear how it works for  Elizabeth's Phelix.  Our
Scooter is having problems with an itchy head, our vet diagnosed food
allergy and gave us an antibiotic powder to dry out the sores in front of
his ears.  We are faithfully putting the powder on twice a day and have now
changed his diet to Natural Balance - Venison & Green Pea, without success.
He continued to scratch and one sore started creeping uncomfortably close to
his eye, so we have resorted to an Elizabethan collar for now.  I asked my
vet about giving Benadryl orally, and he said it wouldn't do any good until
we find the allergen and eliminate it.  I will ask him for the transdermal
cream on Tuesday.  I have to do something for the poor guy, he can't just
stay collared while I try one diet after another...
Does anyone else out there have suggestions for an allergic cat?  Anything
homeopathic?  Some type of soothing herbal mixture to cleanse the sores
with?  I am going to try a prescription allergy diet next, if that doesn't
work I know of a local vet who offers some alternative therapies...

Thanks,
Beth, Blue, Moxie, Dash, Scooter, Will Feral, and Max the Parrot.


Original Message:
 Michelle,
I'm so glad you mentioned this.  My Phelix has the same problem with
pulling his hair out from his tummy and back legs...and he does tend to be
involved in some sibling rivalry on a regualr basis.  I'm going to go see
the compounding pharmacist here.

elizabeth


On 12/30/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  If you are able to touch her ears, I would ask the vet to prescribe
> benadryl to be compounded at a compounding pharmacy into transdermal cream
> to rub inside her ear.  My Patches has been on this for years for anxiety.
> She was prescribed it because she was pulling her fur out of her belly and
> back legs, and the benadryl stopped that. But she also used to go after the
> other cats, and the benadryl pretty much stopped that too. If I forget to
> give it to her, it is noticeable because she goes after Lucy and sometimes
> even me. With the benadryl she is pretty much fine. It does not seem to make
> her groggy at all-- she is quite perky and energetic-- but just takes the
> edge off I guess.
> Michelle
>







--
Leslie     =^..^=

To leave the world a better place - whether by a healthy child, a garden
patch, or an improved social condition - that is to have succeeded.  That
only one life breathed easier because you lived - that is success.
---Ralph Waldo Emerson

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