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Re: Indoor cats are huge!


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Posted by Martisimo on February 24, 2003 at 12:45:12:

In Reply to: Indoor cats are huge! posted by Tara on February 22, 2003 at 22:03:28:

Wow, your kitties are very much in danger of becoming diabetic if they don't lose weight very soon. Indoor cats do not get fat if they don't take in more calories than they expend, just like with people.

There are many things you can do to make sure they lose weight. If they have food out all the time, that must stop, food dishes up and put away between meals. Buy a measuing cup that will be kept with their food and used to measure their meals each feeding....not just any cup will do, most glasses and cups and mugs hold much more than an actual measuring cup.

I feed my cats twice daily, morning and evening and measure their food every meal. A average sized adult cat should get roughly 1/2 measuring cup of regular or OTC diet dry food a day, TOTAL. For my people that's 1/4 cup per meal, a little bit less for my smaller framed people. Remember, this measurement is NOT inclusive of any canned food or treats -- if your cats get these then you must decrease the amount of dry food further -- or not give them at all for a bit, which is what I would recommend doing.

If your cats really are 20 or 30 pounds they are at SERIOUS risk of health problems that can have impact on them for LIFE, even once they lose the weight. You need to speak with your vet about prescription diet foods made for cats that are morbidly obese. Two to try are CNM OM food or Science Diet R/D, they are available only through vets. I would recommend going with the vet-managed program instead of the store bought diet foods since your cats are so seriously overweight. Take them for an exam and have them weighed by your vet -- making sure there are no health issues already existing. Weigh them again in 4-6 weeks and check with your vet at that time to see what he/she thinks about your two cat's progress.

And yes, they will meow at you and tell you they are hungry. I would tell people I'm hungry if were on a diet too. Be strong for them and don't give in and feed them between meals -- their health depends on you. They won't lose on their own, it's all up to you.


:I have 2 cats, 1 is only 2 years old and is close to twenty pounds. The other is 8 or 9 years old and is close to 30 pounds! I assume this is because they are indoor cats and just do not get enough exercize. But some of my friends have indoor cats who are older than mine and a lot skinnier! My cats are not overfed.
:2nd, I believe the 30 pound one has some psychological problems, we've had him for almost 10 years and he is still afraid of us! We almost never see him! At least we know why he is so fat, becuse he does not move out of fear.
:However, I think the 2 year old we can still save, any suggestions?





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