Help! Today our precious little 8 month old kitten was diagnosed with pancreatitis. About a week ago he fairly suddenly started just sleeping most of the day. First day we just thought, well he was up bouncing around all night, that's why he sleeping now. But it got worse, of course over Christmas weekend (and our vet is closed on Mondays). He wasn't eating much. Made him some chicken shreds in water which he did eat, and seemed to perk up for a while after that. Got him to the vet Tuesday. They misunderstood what was going on (hubby is terrible at communication) and sent him home telling us he was a little bit dehydrated and to do the water thing again. Said this was just recovery from the diarrhea he'd had some weeks ago (we treated it then, he'd been good for several weeks now--again, hubby isn't one to argue with an 'expert'). Thursday morning I called them again and spoke to the technician, as he was just still sleeping all the time and not hardly eating, so they brought him in again, did bloodwork (which was all normal), did x-rays which they sent to a radiologist for interpretation who said pancreatitis and possible ibd, no obstructions, and found he had a high temperature (105.1).
Did some sub-Q fluids, antibiotic, and pain med shots. Sent home some Hills i/d chicken and veg food, saying he had to eat low fat diet. We are spoon-feeding him the food, with added water, every couple of hours as he mostly just wants to sleep.
I'm trying to read up on pancreatitis, but I've had 5 eye surgeries and many in-office treatments in the last two years and have only blurry vision in one eye to use to read up on this, so I'm having a really tough time of it. I know this is a diabetes site, but so many of you are so experienced with diets and related diseases and all, can someone help?
From what I have been able to see so far, kittens aren't supposed to get pancreatitis. We expect he probably ate something toxic, we try to keep the place kitten/cat-proof but both he and the 2 year old cat are super high-energy juvenile delinquents that are unbelievably able to get into stuff you'd never dream a cat would mess with (and I've had cats for decades. We call the 2 year old "death wish cat". The kitten watches her, then copies her destructive ways.)
Have seen some things saying the low-fat diet is not necessary, but the vet said NO fat, if I boil a chicken breast to make broth and chicken for him, I have to skim off absolutely all fat. But the food she sent home is certainly not NO fat, tho it is lower than other canned foods. What's the right thing to do?
She gave him a shot of cerenia to hopefully get him eating again. But how long does that last? what else can we do? Right now we are basically spoonfeeding him every couple of hours, as he's just sleeping most of the time but seems to eat if we sit there and serve it to him. But I doubt that he's getting enough calories or water at this point. Hoping he picks up and starts eating more at a time, and going for food himself. Which then raises the problem of keeping him from the other cats' regular food, as the 14 year old is the borderline diabetic controlled by diet, I can't change their food to this prescription stuff or I'll kill the old cat--is there something that works for the diabetic, the pancreatitis, the ibd (which isn't acting up now, if he actually has it)? and oh yeah, the only not-sick cat, the 2 year old, is allergic to chicken...
Can someone help point me in the right direction to get a handle on all this? Or put some good information up here for me? I'm now legally blind in one eye and halfway there in the other at this point, and so searching it all out myself is slow and frustrating and difficult (and I keep ending up crying over what I can manage to read, which really doesn't help the eyesight, but he's our sweet little baby cat and he's so sick...)
Did some sub-Q fluids, antibiotic, and pain med shots. Sent home some Hills i/d chicken and veg food, saying he had to eat low fat diet. We are spoon-feeding him the food, with added water, every couple of hours as he mostly just wants to sleep.
I'm trying to read up on pancreatitis, but I've had 5 eye surgeries and many in-office treatments in the last two years and have only blurry vision in one eye to use to read up on this, so I'm having a really tough time of it. I know this is a diabetes site, but so many of you are so experienced with diets and related diseases and all, can someone help?
From what I have been able to see so far, kittens aren't supposed to get pancreatitis. We expect he probably ate something toxic, we try to keep the place kitten/cat-proof but both he and the 2 year old cat are super high-energy juvenile delinquents that are unbelievably able to get into stuff you'd never dream a cat would mess with (and I've had cats for decades. We call the 2 year old "death wish cat". The kitten watches her, then copies her destructive ways.)
Have seen some things saying the low-fat diet is not necessary, but the vet said NO fat, if I boil a chicken breast to make broth and chicken for him, I have to skim off absolutely all fat. But the food she sent home is certainly not NO fat, tho it is lower than other canned foods. What's the right thing to do?
She gave him a shot of cerenia to hopefully get him eating again. But how long does that last? what else can we do? Right now we are basically spoonfeeding him every couple of hours, as he's just sleeping most of the time but seems to eat if we sit there and serve it to him. But I doubt that he's getting enough calories or water at this point. Hoping he picks up and starts eating more at a time, and going for food himself. Which then raises the problem of keeping him from the other cats' regular food, as the 14 year old is the borderline diabetic controlled by diet, I can't change their food to this prescription stuff or I'll kill the old cat--is there something that works for the diabetic, the pancreatitis, the ibd (which isn't acting up now, if he actually has it)? and oh yeah, the only not-sick cat, the 2 year old, is allergic to chicken...
Can someone help point me in the right direction to get a handle on all this? Or put some good information up here for me? I'm now legally blind in one eye and halfway there in the other at this point, and so searching it all out myself is slow and frustrating and difficult (and I keep ending up crying over what I can manage to read, which really doesn't help the eyesight, but he's our sweet little baby cat and he's so sick...)

Did she honestly not even know there was a feline version.