This article explores the reasons why people might seek alternatives to conventional pet foods, describes the different categories of alternative feeding practices, and discusses approaches to communicating with pet owners about nutrition and diet for their pets. The goal is for the reader to acquire a better understanding of unconventional feeding practices being used for companion animals so that she or he is better informed on the views and concerns of the pet-owning public regarding dog and cat nutrition and bettter able to enter into the dialog of how these pets should best be fed.
Overview
Kidney Insufficiency
Kidney Diet
Benazepril
Rehydration and Diuresis
Client Administered Fluids
Phosphate Binder
Calcitriol
Erythropoietin Replacement
Hypotensive Agent
Appetite Stimulant
Client Education
Prognosis
Kidney Failure - Chronic
Kidney Faliure - Acute
Pyelonephritis
Polycystic Kidney Disease
Urolithiaisis
Feline Idiopathic Cystitis
Urethral Obstruction
Bladder Atony
Perineal Urethrostomy
Suggested Readings
Feline heartworm disease is a very different clinical entity from canine heartworm disease. In cats, the arrival and death of immature heartworms in the pulmonary arteries can cause coughing and dyspnea as early as 3 months postinfection. Adult heartworms suppress the function of pulmonary intravascular macrophages and thus reduce clinical disease in chronic feline heartworm infection. Approximately 80% of asymptomatic cats self-cure. Median survival time for symptomatic cats is 1.5 years, or 4 years if only cats living beyond the day of presentation are considered.
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