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I actually think baby food is fine for a while, as long as it is not all
she gets for a long time. If you are trying to get her over a hump and
that is what she will take easiest, I would give that to her. Calories are
calories and it does not matter where they come from if it is food they can
digest, in terms of getting calories into her and preventing HL. The only
thing that is missing from baby food is some vitamins, and it is not very fatty,
so it is not sufficient long-term. But it is what I am syringing Simon now to
supplement the little he is eating on his own since getting chemo on
Thursday. The internist said a calorie is a calorie, and getting enough
baby food into her is getting enough calories into her, period.
If you do want to do a fattier, more nutritious food for syringing, I had
been using A/D, which you probably know is a prescription Hills' diet for sick
cats, and thinning it just a little with chicken baby food. Simon seemed to
like it for a while, until he got really sick and started fighting with
me. I find, with him, that the better he feels the more ok he is with
syringing. Like now, he is just a little off from chemo, he does not mind it so
much. When he was so sick I thought he was dying he was really upset about being
syringed even a little bit.
If you want tips on syringing, here is what I do: kneel down behind
the cat, use the left hand to hold the head and open the mouth a little, and put
the syringe in a little at an angle with the right hand. Syringe 1 cc and let
them swallow, repeat a few times, and then take a break and pet (though Gypsy
doesn't like petting, I guess). I try to get about 20 or 30 cc in a
day. An average size cat needs about 250 calories a day if possible.
If you are just feeding Gerbers chicken baby food, that is 2 1/2 jars. If you
are mixing with A/D it is probably a smaller amount. If she is eating some on
her own, which she seems to be, you can reduce the syringing accordingly.
You may also want to have a damp paper towel next to you before you start,
to wipe off what ends up on her face or yours (I get it in my hair a lot).
If she is hard to syringe and hold, you may want to pre-fill several syringes so
you don't have to refill while holding her.
Michelle
In a message dated 1/29/05 12:26:12 PM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Nina, |
- Re: Update on Gypsy Nina
- Re: Update on Gypsy Lernermichelle
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- Re: Update on Gypsy Kerry MacKenzie
- Re: Update on Gypsy Nina
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- Re: Update on Gypsy Nina
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- Re: Update on Gypsy Nina
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- Re: Update on Gypsy Lernermichelle
- Re: Update on Gypsy Nina
- Re: Update on Gypsy Belinda Sauro
- Re: Update on Gypsy Nina
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