same as a normal kitten. get a kitten bottle from a pet store and some POWDERED kmr( kitten milk replacement) and feed it every 3 hours round the clock.i can tell you everything you need to know if you want. just email me ( see my profile on yahoo answers)
2006-07-14 04:54:17
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answer #1
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answered by ? 2
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Well, if it's not with it's mother, I would think that the kitten would need to be fed some formula (perhaps suggested by the vet) through an eyedropper. Make sure it doesn't have too much loud noise, and give it lots of love. If it was born with only three legs, and it survived, it should be fine. If it was done by an accident and the little thing lost it's leg, GET IT TO A VET and maybe get a prosthetic cat leg. I wouldn't really worry about the loss of limbs as far as mobility goes. Animals of all shapes and sizes learned to crawl and move with a loss of limbs throught the years. I should know, I've seen a 1 legged chicken and a 3 legged cat, myself.
2006-07-14 04:54:59
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I have a friend who has a 3-legged cat and it gets along just fine. And believe it or not, I saw a cat on Animal Planet with only 2 legs and it was able to run and got along just fine. People and animals will adjust to a "disability." Blindness, deafness, loss of limbs, etc. How did your kitten lose its leg...was it a birth defect or amputated? If it was amputated in some way, check it frequently to ensure no infection is there. Just give him that extra love to show him that he's "special."
2006-07-14 05:52:13
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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nicely for starters, the female to procure the kitten from should be shot for taking it remote from that's mom so quickly. They do sleep lot at this age because they are transforming into continuously. Being clumsy is established too, my 8 week old kittens nevertheless stumble once in a lengthy time period on the mattress, Cat nip will positioned them to sleep 9 situations outta ten at t this age besides. you want to get a extra valuable high quality food too. S/he desires kitten for, not purely canned yet dry. the clarification behind it is it kwater toeir teeth good, and it also prevents tarter develop. you could start up out with the help of including waterto the dry food to soften it up, or upload different canned food. in case your kitten is eating in common words a number of it, and leaving it for later, provide it smaller parts. Discard inspite of the toddler would not devour. you do not want it getting unwell.
2016-11-02 01:30:48
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answer #4
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answered by rangnow 4
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Besides taking it to the vet to make sure it's healthy and all, just treat it like a normal cat. Three-legged cats don't have any special needs aside from other cats, aside from maybe needing help climbing things - if it's a front leg that's missing, the cat's able to jump and everything just like normal. I don't know about back leg, but I can't imagine it'd be much different.
In general, just treat him/her like a normal cat, take it to the vet to gets its shots; the three-leggedness won't affect it much in the long run. Good luck!
2006-07-14 04:52:00
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous 3
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Take care of it as you would a normal kitten of that age. It is going to need kitten milk and a lot of care being so young.
2006-07-14 04:55:26
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answer #6
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answered by redunicorn 7
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Just as you would any kitten. If the mother is not involved then you will need to bottle feed it. If it's healthy otherwise, it should be just fine. You don't want to give it a complex.
2006-07-14 05:23:51
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answer #7
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answered by Betty C 1
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I have absolutely no idea but im sure if you look in the phone book and call a local vets office they would be more than happy to help by ansewring questions for free
2006-07-14 06:50:56
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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If it's that young it won't be on solids yet so you need to feed it cat milk replacer, cows milk isn't close enough, and it'll need feeding really often, probably through the night as well.
2006-07-14 04:54:37
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answer #9
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answered by JadeDragonMage 3
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treat it like how u would treat other cats and other animals.
be kind, caring, and extremely gentle, take him/her to the vet as usual, give him/her their shots.
2006-07-14 05:16:56
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answer #10
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answered by ac2012 2
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