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I recently took in a yr old cat that had been abused. Someone kicked its front teeth out! Does anyone know if cats can eat very well without them? Should I just feed her wet food?

2007-11-08 08:20:38 · 5 answers · asked by typocinnamongrl 2 in Pets Cats

5 answers

Congratulations on taking in this cat--you sound kind and will treat it well I can imagine.

'You could also dampen the dry food with milk, the juice from a can of tuna, water or other meat juices. But soft food would be best

2007-11-10 00:59:47 · answer #1 · answered by Makemeaspark 7 · 0 0

A feline's teeth are used mostly for holding prey and dispatching them. They actually use their tongues (which are like wire-brushes) to get the meat off the bones of their prey for their food.

So cats can do very well with NO teeth. Since I feed my cats canned food and a raw meat diet they don't need teeth to eat their food (even though they have all theirs). You might use canned mixed with dry or just the canned.

2007-11-08 09:30:51 · answer #2 · answered by old cat lady 7 · 1 0

the cat shouldn't have a problem with almost any food you give it. Unless the food is bigger than his mouth.

While I'm a huge fan of low carb wet food (see link) I have known cats with out teeth eat dry. cats rarely chew dry food anyway - which is why the "its good for their teeth" bit is a myth

Congratulations on your new addition.

2007-11-08 08:26:01 · answer #3 · answered by Connie S 7 · 1 0

i have a very old cat that has no teeth and i buy small piece of the dry food and mix it with can food and she is able to eat it ok if i give her just dry food then she cant eat it so try mixing it and see how she likes it good luck.

2007-11-08 08:30:19 · answer #4 · answered by Cathy J 3 · 1 0

pass to the vet and ask approximately this: greater suitable puppy shops could sell a finger brush. that is style of like a 'finger puppet' which you placed on your finger, and rub down the cat's tooth and gums. they're created from some style of mushy rubber. you do no longer prefer to surely use any style of brush on a cats tooth because they're smaller, and hence, thinner, than our tooth. a broom ought to scratch their tooth and / or gums. rather, use the finger brush, moist it with water, and get them used to you massaging their tooth and gums (it particularly is a lot much less confusing in case you teach them as a kitten.) If this would not remedy the subject, they have cat toothpaste. you're lots greater effective off getting this on the vet.

2016-12-08 15:58:53 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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