Cat Forum / Health and Behavior / February 2004
Cat barfs every time she eats after 3-4 hours w/o food.
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ron barry - 20 Feb 2004 10:24 GMT I have a siamese mix, about 3.5 years old, that is fine on her food (science diet light - she won't eat anything else) unless her bowl is left empty for a few hours. When that happens, no matter what I do, she ends up barfing up whatever she eats. This has been going on for years. Her kitten (about 3 years old) does not have the same problem.
She doesn't chew her food at all, regardless of when it was that she last ate.
Anyone have any ideas?
thanks...
rOn
kaeli - 20 Feb 2004 14:59 GMT > I have a siamese mix, about 3.5 years old, that is fine on her food > (science diet light - she won't eat anything else) unless her bowl is [quoted text clipped - 6 lines] > > Anyone have any ideas? Jeffrey does this, too. He just eats too much, too fast, if he had an empty bowl. Solution: don't let the bowl get empty. :)
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Elizabeth Blake - 21 Feb 2004 05:28 GMT > Jeffrey does this, too. He just eats too much, too fast, if he had an > empty bowl. > Solution: don't let the bowl get empty. :) Otto was doing this, too. He was become a total pig and eat as much as possible, then puke it all up. I used to give them wet food only in the morning, and leave out dry for grazing for the rest of the day. Now I give them wet food in the m orning and if it's all/mostly gone by the time I leave for work, I put a little dry food in the bowls. Like, a tablespoon in each bowl. If I put any more than that, Otto will eat it as fast as possible and I'll find puke when I return home. I do the same thing at night. They get their wet, and a little while later I give them a little dry.
Liz
Mary - 20 Feb 2004 17:49 GMT > I have a siamese mix, about 3.5 years old, that is fine on her food > (science diet light - she won't eat anything else) unless her bowl is [quoted text clipped - 6 lines] > > Anyone have any ideas? Why leave her bowl empty at all? Is she overweight? Lots of cats do fine with free feeding. Sometimes the simple solution is the best. (Post some photos or links, I love Siamese cats!)
Laura R. - 21 Feb 2004 01:34 GMT circa 20 Feb 2004 02:24:18 -0800, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, ron barry (newsronb@foodini.org) said,
> She doesn't chew her food at all, regardless of when it was that she > last ate. In addition to what the others said, cats really don't chew their food regardless. They have no molars, and their teeth are designed to rip flesh from bones. The minimal "chewing" that most cats do is really little more than chipping their dry food into slightly smaller bits- if at all.
Laura
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Hailey - 21 Feb 2004 01:57 GMT > In addition to what the others said, cats really don't chew their > food regardless. They have no molars, and their teeth are designed to [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > > Laura Oh wow! Sometimes I am so slow. I watch the boys with their treats and James literally swallows it. I could never even figure it out. Tucker actually chews his into tiny pieces, and they start out tiny LOL I guess that'd be why, so cats who swallow, which appears is normal, don't choke! I think I learn something new here every day!
Hailey
Laura R. - 21 Feb 2004 02:15 GMT circa Sat, 21 Feb 2004 01:57:50 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, Hailey (hailey@cmi.net) said,
> > In addition to what the others said, cats really don't chew their > > food regardless. They have no molars, and their teeth are designed to [quoted text clipped - 10 lines] > choke! > I think I learn something new here every day! BTW, cats do actually have molars (one on each side, upper and lower), but they're not grinding molars, like ours our. They're more "shredding" molars that are used to chew stringy flesh off of bones (which is why you'll see cats chewing chunks of meat off of bones with the sides of their mouths), or to break up hard food. They're not, however, used to grind food to a mushy pulp like molars in omnivores or herbivores are. Just wanted to clear up my mistype. :-)
Laura
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PawsForThought - 24 Feb 2004 02:41 GMT >From: Laura R. UseFirstInitialPlusRobinson@technologist.com
>circa Sat, 21 Feb 2004 01:57:50 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, >Hailey (hailey@cmi.net) said, [quoted text clipped - 23 lines] > >Laura That's exactly how my cats eat. They turn their heads to the side and chew just like you describe (they're on a raw diet).
Lauren ________ See my cats: http://community.webshots.com/album/56955940rWhxAe Raw Diet Info: http://www.holisticat.com/drjletter.html http://www.geocities.com/rawfeeders/ForCatsOnly.html Declawing Info: http://www.wholecat.com/articles/claws.htm
Laura R. - 25 Feb 2004 02:59 GMT circa 24 Feb 2004 02:41:30 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, PawsForThought (darnit7@aol.comnolitter) said,
> >BTW, cats do actually have molars (one on each side, upper and > >lower), but they're not grinding molars, like ours our. They're more [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] > That's exactly how my cats eat. They turn their heads to the side and chew > just like you describe (they're on a raw diet). And then they swallow big ol' hunks of whatever they chewed off. ;-)
Laura
 Signature I am Dyslexia of Borg, Your a.s will be laminated.
PawsForThought - 25 Feb 2004 03:59 GMT >From: Laura R. UseFirstInitialPlusRobinson@technologist.com
>circa 24 Feb 2004 02:41:30 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, >PawsForThought (darnit7@aol.comnolitter) said, [quoted text clipped - 15 lines] > >Laura LOL, but of course! Argh ________ See my cats: http://community.webshots.com/album/56955940rWhxAe Raw Diet Info: http://www.holisticat.com/drjletter.html http://www.geocities.com/rawfeeders/ForCatsOnly.html Declawing Info: http://www.wholecat.com/articles/claws.htm
Laura R. - 21 Feb 2004 02:20 GMT circa Sat, 21 Feb 2004 01:57:50 GMT, in rec.pets.cats.health+behav, Hailey (hailey@cmi.net) said,
> > In addition to what the others said, cats really don't chew their > > food regardless. They have no molars, and their teeth are designed to [quoted text clipped - 10 lines] > choke! > I think I learn something new here every day! Hey, I even found references! :-)
http://www.felinefuture.com/nutrition/bpo_ch4a.php http://www.cat-dental-health.com/html/anatomy.html http://rulingcatsanddogs.com/facts-cat-trivia.htm
Laura
 Signature I am Dyslexia of Borg, Your a.s will be laminated.
Cathy Friedmann - 21 Feb 2004 02:01 GMT > I have a siamese mix, about 3.5 years old, that is fine on her food > (science diet light - she won't eat anything else) unless her bowl is [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] > > thanks... Does she throw it up right away, & does it look basically like it did in the bowl, only now it's damp & warmer? ;-) My first cat did this very often, throughout her life, yet she was one very healthy cat. As Laura mentioned in her reply in this thread, cats often don't actually chew their food, & SD Light (my cats eat it, too) is little & round - probably quite easy for cats to swallow whole.
Sounds gross, but have you watched to see if she will re-eat her food once it's thrown up, & if it then stays down the second time around?
Cathy
-- "Staccato signals of constant information..." ("The Boy in the Bubble") Paul Simon
Fan - 21 Feb 2004 05:22 GMT >I have a siamese mix, about 3.5 years old, that is fine on her food >(science diet light - she won't eat anything else) unless her bowl is [quoted text clipped - 10 lines] > > rOn My purebred applehead Siamese used to throw up quite often. He has outgrown that, but still does it occationally. It seems to do no harm. My previous purebred appleheads did not do this. The current applehead mix has never done it. I have not heard other Siamese owners complaining either.
The dry food dishes are never allowed to be empty so that was not a factor for him. One trick that I have heard of to slow down a dog that eats too fast is to spread the food out on the floor instead of putting it in a bowl. It takes more time to gather it up that way.
A vet suggested giving my cat hairball treatments, but I saw no difference when doing that versus not doing it. The vet was not worried and again, it seemed to do the cat no harm. As in your case, it appeared as if the food was swallowed whole, but I didn't inspect it that carefully.
There was an issue of getting up in the middle of the night for the bathroom, for me. I never found a solution to the problem of steping in it with bare feet. Perhaps slippers? :-)
Mary - 21 Feb 2004 12:28 GMT > I never found a solution to the problem of steping > in it with bare feet. Perhaps slippers? :-) No way! Then you have something to wash in addition to your foot. I limp into the bathroom and put my whole foot up in the sink. Lucky I have those wide European-style sinks.
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