Inflammatory Bowel Disease (asking for a friend)

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Complick8d

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I'm asking for a friend. Her orinch boy, Louie, was just diagnosed with IBD, based on symptoms. Does anyone have any simplified info that I can pass along for her in terms of Diet, Meds, and just general living with IBD? They did bloodwork and I recommended that she get an ultrasound to be sure there is nothing else big going on.

Thanks!
 
I'm sorry, I know nothing about IBD. I just did a board search for IBD and got over 1000 hits. You might try that, and then PMing somebody who says their kitty has had it?

Carl in SC
 
i can only tell you my experience but to be honest, mine isn't the typical experience from what i've read so not sure it will help at all.

my late Kitty had a very mild case of IBD. she could eat whatever and while yes she would have some problems from some things, she never seemed to be in the distress i've seen some kitties experience from it. her biggest problem was chronic diarhea. while in a lot of the kitties i read about steroids are part of the treatment program, Kitty never needed that. raw rabbit was her medicine. as long as she had a bit of raw rabbit every day, the diarhea stayed away. and that's all we ever had to do as far as her IBD.

now mind you, if steroids is what is needed, i'd use the steroids. i'd rather deal with a cat with ibd controlled by steroids that develops diabetes than a cat without diabetes with poorly controlled IBD and it's flare ups and the distress it can cause soooooooooooo :-)
 
My Conor has it but he is usually helped by clavamox. We have been able to avoid steroids. Don't have link to the TAMIL study but injectible vitamin b12 can help help with absorption of food.
 
Lisa and Merlyn (GA) said:
My Conor has it but he is usually helped by clavamox. We have been able to avoid steroids. Don't have link to the TAMIL study but injectible vitamin b12 can help help with absorption of food.


Lisa, how often does he have to take the Clavamox? Thanks for the reference to the TAMIL study on B-12 (I looked it up and several links came up which I'll have to look through)... wonder if methyl-b12 would be helpful, since I'm not sure she'd do injections. Does Conor have to eat anything in particular diet wise? How was he diagnosed?
 
Usually when he is having a flare. He has a mild case and sometimes it is pacreatitis. The b12 would be subq. It is cyanocobalamin. Typing on cell. It is th e TAMU study. He has been on wellness canned but any change in diet gives him diarrhea.
 
My GA Boomer had moderate IBD. He had the throwing up kind of IBD ever since he was a kitten. He lived until he was about 3 and a half. My vet put him on pred (from symptoms) and it helped for a couple years. Then he got diabetes from the pred. Went on Lantus. Went OTJ in a couple months. Then we switched to budesonide for the IBD which worked for a while too. He was able to take bude and it didn't affect his blood sugar. Bude is more money than pred but worth it. After a while bude stopped working so he had a biopsy to confirm his dx then he went on leukaran. He also had other issues-the poor thing-so it was hard to control his IBD.

I'd try grain-free food or raw if the cat will eat it. Boomer wouldn't. Soulistic is grain-free at Petco and is a cheaper "quality" food at about .89 cents a can. There is also a list of grain-free foods posted in the stickies on Health.

There's also helpful information on catinfo.org (Dr. Lisa's site) on IBD and how to make your own food. I think there is also an IBD yahoo group.
 
Bear Man had IBD, and Teddy has IBD/lymphoma. They were diagnosed by biopsies, with samples taken via colonoscopy.

I have not had experience using Clavamox for IBD in Bear Man and Teddy. An antibiotic which is very good in controlling IBD is Metronidazole, which has an anti-inflammatory effect in the gut. I would recommend trying a course of that as an initial treatment.

In my experience, the type of B12 which is helpful is Cyanocobalamin, not Methylcobalamin (methyl B12).

A lot of people have had success with a raw diet. Others have tried a "novel protein" diet, which involves feeding animal and vegetable protein sources (such as lamb, venison, duck, rice) which the cat is unlikely to have consumed and become allergic to from normal cat food.

Both of my kitties were treated with steroids. Bear Man became diabetic from the steroids, and went on to have other complications, but his disease was severe. If diet and other less aggressive treatments don't help, steroids may be required. As has been mentioned, the Budesonide is a steroid which may have more local action in the get, and less systemic absorption.

It has been mentioned that IBD kitties may also be prone to flare ups of pancreatitis, as inflammation travels to the pancreas from the intestines. IBD flares can also be painful. If the cat seems to be having flare up, pain meds may be required.
 
My 15 year old Redd has had IBD for about 7 years. He was diagnosed by biopsy (three types of inflammatory cells were present) and it affects his lower GI, so it is mostly diarrhea and not vomiting. At first he was on Prednisolone and Metronizadole (flagyl) for about 3 months and then gradually tapered off both as he improved. We also changed him from dry food to wet, grain free, novel protein food which seems to keep it pretty well in check. We have tried almost every brand of grain-free and some of the raw frozen food too, and it is trial and error to find one that works for your cat. He did really well on Natural Balance single protein wet food for a long time. (We have sinced switched to Wellness Core due to his diabetes since it is lower in carbs.) He does get occasional flare ups once or twice a year. They are treated with a short course of metronizadole (which has anti-inflammatory properties) and cerenia (to address vomiting if present). Our vet also has him on a very low dose (1/4 tab) of cerenia twice weekly as a it has possible preventative properties and has suggested Leukeran for the same if his flare-ups start to become more frequent. Our vet also suggested adding fish oil (one squirt per day) to his food as the omega 3's may be anti-inflammatories but it seemed to set off my guy's stomach so we stopped.

It is hard to give advice since IBD can be so different cat to cat due to the location of the inflammation and the type of inflammatory cells. I would definitely say switching to a grain-free, single protein, wet food would be a good first step to try to eliminate food allergy-related triggers and remove the bulk of digesting dry food. I'm glad I didn't have to deal with long-term prednisolone use but it did help when his IBD was most severe. I've heard good things about Budesonide and B12 shots but never tried either. Metronizadole works best for my guy but I will warn that it has an incredibly bitter taste and the only way I could get it into my cat was by splitting it in half, putting it in a gel capsule, and using a pill popper. There used to be a yahoo group for IBD cats but I'm not sure if it is still around. I find flare ups are more quickly resolved if I catch it early so your friend is going to have to become an expert in cat poop observation. If my cat's poop changes from "logs" to "soft-serve swirls", becomes extra smelly or more frequent than usual, I call the vet. If you let it go, you risk severe dehydration and too-rapid weight loss, both of which are very serious. One other thing that may be helpful, not as a treatment of the illness but of the symptoms, is adding additional litter boxes. IBD cats often have the suddne urge to go, poop much more frequently each day, and produce smellier poop. Our guy had daily "accidents" until we added a box on each floor of the house. More options for a clean box someplace nearby for the cat meant less poop on the bed/couch/rug for us.

Sadly my guy now has diabetes and pancreatitis which complicates things. The pancreatitis is similar to the IBD in that it is inflammatory and flare ups in one can trigger the other. And since the diabetes means he pees all the time now too, I may end up with a house full of litter boxes if we can't get this under control soon. Good luck to your friend!
 
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