Squeaks & Nemo
Member Since 2016
Hi again! While this question pertains to my civvie, Nemo, I would like to say that my sugar foots, Squeaks, has responded marvelously to just the wet food switch! Thanks to this wonderful site and all of the helpful info!
My little Nemo has been diagnosed as having EG ulcers in his mouth and on his lips. His only significant response is frequent reguritation of food, but he still eats and drinks well, so it's not and emergency.
We know this is an immune response. The two most likely culprits are food or something outside. (Don't panic! He's indoor with fenced yard supervised play time.) A while back we tried the hyopallergenic RX food. Not that I would feed that now, knowing what I do about RX food, but he snubbed his nose at it so that was pointless. It does seem to happen more during warmer months when I open the door to the backyard and let them play in the afternoons, but I haven't recorded flare-ups (didn't know it could be seasonal until today) and can't say it's true with certianty. However, in the interim, I'm looking at food. Is there a (double whammy!) listing of diabetic approved, allergy approved (or at least LESS likely to cause it) foods out there? Ultimately I think switching them both to raw will solve everything (IF the allergy is food) but that can take anywhere from days to months for them to accept it. I want to mitigate these lesions/ulcers now if possible.
My little Nemo has been diagnosed as having EG ulcers in his mouth and on his lips. His only significant response is frequent reguritation of food, but he still eats and drinks well, so it's not and emergency.
We know this is an immune response. The two most likely culprits are food or something outside. (Don't panic! He's indoor with fenced yard supervised play time.) A while back we tried the hyopallergenic RX food. Not that I would feed that now, knowing what I do about RX food, but he snubbed his nose at it so that was pointless. It does seem to happen more during warmer months when I open the door to the backyard and let them play in the afternoons, but I haven't recorded flare-ups (didn't know it could be seasonal until today) and can't say it's true with certianty. However, in the interim, I'm looking at food. Is there a (double whammy!) listing of diabetic approved, allergy approved (or at least LESS likely to cause it) foods out there? Ultimately I think switching them both to raw will solve everything (IF the allergy is food) but that can take anywhere from days to months for them to accept it. I want to mitigate these lesions/ulcers now if possible.