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My boyfriends dads cat is losing weight badly. She is about 2 yrs old and not spayed so she does go into heat alot.About a month ago she started losing weight and it just keeps coming off. She is so thin now, her sides are almost concave. I'm not around her alot but the other day I saw her rubbing her butt on the carpet. Could it be worms? would that cause the weight loss? Could it be the stress of going in heat so much? Any ideas? I know we should take her to the vet, but I'd like to aviod that if we can cause we can't afford it right now

2007-07-14 12:04:23 · 47 answers · asked by Ashley 2 in Pets Cats

47 answers

If it's worms, you'd need to treat for the right kind and if the cat is severely underweight most treatments would hurt her, a vet needs to make the decision as to how much to give for that.

Rubbing the butt doesn't necessarily mean worms, but a sample of her poop will let the vet know if this is what it is or not. If she doesn't have worms and you try to treat her with medication then you're making it even worse on her body, which is having an extremely hard time right now.

If she's diabetic, which can happen very suddenly, it melts the weight off very quickly. Same with cats whose thyroid suddenly doesn't work right, they drop weight very fast and don't put it back on. Left untreated, it will kill the cat.

Unspayed females going in and out of heat are extremely stressed and can become ill, their bodies don't give them any rest. Have you called the shelter about low cost spay programs in your area? Or the vet to see if they can bill at a later month or in installments? Most work with low income households that can't afford all the cost up front.

You do need to get weight on her before it gets too bad, but to do that you need to tackle the problem of why it's dropping off her in the first place. Make some phone calls, that's the first step.

2007-07-14 12:16:02 · answer #1 · answered by Elaine M 7 · 0 0

Take her to a vet. Worms are a probability however different stipulations can purpose weight reduction and a usual blood experiment can rule them out. As my former cat elderly, she grew to be thinner because of very slow kidney failure. She lived for a few years with this situation, however was once so much thinner than in her early life. Diabetes may also be a purpose. Some cats additionally reduce weight seasonally. My historical cat might get thin in the summertime and positioned it again on in wintry weather. However, if this extra severe than traditional seasonal variant, a go back and forth to the vet to rule out all feasible factors is right.

2016-09-05 10:04:04 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It sound like it is most likley worms..Worms do not allow the cat to get the proper nutrition they nees because the worms feed off all protein the animal digest....if she is still easting i would check her stools to make sure there are no apperant worms...take her to the vet if you notice blood in her stools or if you notice any worms...her rubbing her but on the carpet could be heat but most likley it is worms...once you have got rid of the worms keep her oon a diet of worm baby food meat i kno it sounds weird but it helps build the immune system and gets alot of nutrition back in the body...continue that for at least a week!!! GOOD LUCK!!!

2007-07-14 12:32:43 · answer #3 · answered by Jasmine M 2 · 0 0

Eat 5 6 small meals a day instead of 3

2016-02-15 19:56:13 · answer #4 · answered by Ada 3 · 0 0

The cat needs a vet! Cats come in heat every 28 days just like people. She needs vetinary care and to be spayed.

2007-07-14 12:09:21 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

spice things up with 35 minutes of foreplay and 45 minutes of sex in different positions

2017-04-07 09:50:47 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

It could definitely be worms and she should most definitely be spayed when she is healthy enough to do so. Take her to the vet PLEASE! If you can't afford it turn her over to an organization that can properly care for her. It's unfair for that to happen to the cat without receiving proper medical attention. Once she became their cat it became their responsibility to care for the cat.

2007-07-14 12:14:02 · answer #7 · answered by Carrie P 1 · 0 0

The possibilities include diabetes (drinking alot of water?+ and hypothyroidism. Both are very treatable, You do need to go to a vet. If it were worms, I imagine some would have come out of the stool and would have been noticed

2007-07-14 13:29:24 · answer #8 · answered by Ken 6 · 0 0

I would take her to the vet immediatly. My cat had those same symptoms and it turns out that she had distemper. Unfortunantly, we waited too long and I had to put her down. I would take her to the vet as soon as you could.

2007-07-14 12:08:38 · answer #9 · answered by LunarWolf 2 · 0 0

let a great dane walk you for 13 minutes 5 mph

2016-03-03 05:41:36 · answer #10 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

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