Hi, all,
I'm hoping someone might be able to offer me some guidance.
My sweet kitty experiences intermittent vomiting and diarrhea, and the vet offered a possible diagnosis of gastritis. (End of May, we had blood work, fecal exam, urinalysis, x-rays and physical exam, and results were normal.)
When my previous cat had chronic renal failure, I gave him slippery elm bark to help with nausea/vomiting. My first question is, for cats without CRF, what is the proper dosage/frequency/method for administering? I've read different things about mixing in food, mixing in water then in food, or making a syrup. And does anyone have experience using slippery elm bark for gastritis/GI issues?
Also, we recently switched foods because the vet recommended trying a new protein source. According to the label, it's more calorically dense than the previous food. I'm assuming that when determining how much to feed, I should go by calories in a day and not ounces in a day?
Thanks everyone for your help,
Leni
I'm hoping someone might be able to offer me some guidance.
My sweet kitty experiences intermittent vomiting and diarrhea, and the vet offered a possible diagnosis of gastritis. (End of May, we had blood work, fecal exam, urinalysis, x-rays and physical exam, and results were normal.)
When my previous cat had chronic renal failure, I gave him slippery elm bark to help with nausea/vomiting. My first question is, for cats without CRF, what is the proper dosage/frequency/method for administering? I've read different things about mixing in food, mixing in water then in food, or making a syrup. And does anyone have experience using slippery elm bark for gastritis/GI issues?
Also, we recently switched foods because the vet recommended trying a new protein source. According to the label, it's more calorically dense than the previous food. I'm assuming that when determining how much to feed, I should go by calories in a day and not ounces in a day?
Thanks everyone for your help,
Leni
