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Originally Posted by Ritz 
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I am still giving her 1/8 tsp of acidifier.
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Why? Her problem has been identified as stress-induced, her urine ph was within the normal range, and a raw, meat-based diet is naturally acidifying. Did you speak with the raw-feeding vet about this?
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Originally Posted by Ritz 
Last question first: Based on what I found in the litter box, she had not peed for 18 hours. Murphy’s law being what it is, during the six hours while I was at work, she peed some (in the litter box). When I took her to the vet that afternoon, her bladder was empty and she was well hydrated. The vet made the assumption that she was peeing, just not in the litter box. (And, he couldn’t get a urine sample to run tests, though he suspects nothing would be found.)
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This makes MUCH more sense. (And is, in fact, what I thought was the most likely scenario.)
You will need to find where she peed (a black-light can help with this) and clean it with an enzyme-containing solution (like Nature's Miracle or Nok-Out) so she doesn't continue peeing there even after the current cystitis flare-up is resolved.
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Originally Posted by Ritz 
I don’t feed Ritz an entire meal of organ meat; I’m lucky if she’ll eat any, which is why I bribe her with one chicken heart or, more recently, freeze dried salmon (she loves it, and it has Omega 3). So far the only non-organ meat she likes is kidney. I’m not optimistic about the beef tripe I got her. Do you have any other NOM better liked than others?
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I only feed my cats chicken or turkey liver and beef kidney.
Green tripe is considered muscle meat for raw-feeding purposes, not organ, and contains a comparatively lower nutrient profile than most other meats, so should only be fed maybe once a week. (White tripe has been "bleached" and shouldn't be fed at all.)
Sprinkling freeze-dried chicken over the foods should help entice Ritz to eat what you want her to eat and is probably a better option than salmon. Also, all six of my cats find it irresistible, while other freeze-dried meat treats (cod, beef, etc.) are hit or miss.
If you want a frankenprey Omega 3 source, try feeding a single sardine once a week. It can either be frozen, or canned in water with no salt added.
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Originally Posted by Ritz 
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I would like to reduce that to 4 or 4.5 oz depending on her weight.
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Why? The vet said her weight is fine and 5 ounces per day is exactly right for a 10.5 pound cat, at 3% of her body weight.
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Originally Posted by Ritz 
I do have some CR rabbit (has no produce or grain) which I’ll try tomorrow. I am trying to rotate the meat so she doesn’t become fixated on one protein source (like she did with the seafood). Are Cornish Hens/Chicken/Turkey different enough? She’s had lamb before and beef, and liked it. Pork, too but based on her reaction, holding off on that source of protein.
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Rotating is good. Keep trying with the pork - there are so very many causes for vomiting besides an (IMO unlikely) intolerance potential.
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Originally Posted by Ritz 
Thanks also for the amounts. And to clarify: it is 3 oz of raw PLUS bone+liver+kidney which is an additional ounce, i.e., a total of 4 oz?
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No. Those amounts are based on the amount of fresh raw (non-commercial) meat meals you said you were offering every day... in other words, the three ounces.
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Originally Posted by Ritz 
Very early this morning she had two incidents of runny stool, about a pinky finger’s amount. Not too smelly. Later she finally ate meat/liver/and bone from a Cornish Hen ( chicken wing tip and part of the upper thigh bone that I beat to death with a hammer), I’m guessing about ½ oz. So far, she’s kept it in her. Is there any other condition/allergy that might be causing runny stools—some weird worm from the pork I gave her?
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Pork is perfectly safe unless you live in a third world country.
In an earlier post, you said Ritz isn't eating bone. Not eating any bone and not eating ENOUGH bone will always result in soft to runny stool. No need to go looking for further problems until you correct the obvious one.
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Originally Posted by Ritz 
I am drying egg shells. I removed most of the membrane but just wondering, why does it have to be removed, too?...
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I have no idea, as it's considered a temporary measure and is not a topic I've researched very deeply.
AC