How Healthy is your Cat’s Colon?
July 29, 2009 by Admin
Filed under IBS - Free Content
Feline Constipation
Concerning colon health, cat constipation is relatively easy to recognize. Fortunately, it is fairly easy to help your cat recover from feline constipation.
Just as with human colon health, cat colon health problems have a great deal to do with the age of the cat. As in humans, older cats are more susceptible to constipation. Those that are eight-years-old and above are more likely to become constipated. Nonetheless, it is possible for a cat of any age to become constipated.
A cat with bowels that are functioning efficiently will usually have one or two bowel movements every day. Of course, just as with humans, every cat is different. Signs of feline constipation include:
No bowel movements, or very infrequent bowel movements
Straining during a bowel movement
Painful bowel movements
A sudden decrease in the amount of stool produced
When it comes to colon health, cat constipation is a sign that something is not working correctly within the digestive tract. And, if you fail to take action, your cat may become quite ill. Signs the constipation has advanced and is becoming serious include:
Failure to keep itself groomed
Lethargic behavior
Loss of appetite
Crouching and hunching up
Vomiting
Passing a small amount of diarrhea, which is runny and blood-tinged
Some potential causes of cat constipation include:
Ingesting foreign bodies, hair, and animal bones
A dirty litter box
Recent hospitalization
Lack of exercise (let your cat out to run)
Obstructions, such as improperly healed pelvic fractures or tumors
Medication
Hair matted with dirt/mud
Injuries from cat fights
Obesity (don’t overfeed your pet please or share your meals)
Parasites, usually obtained from dirt, animals, or unclean water
To maintain proper feline colon health, constipation needs to be treated as soon as possible. The first approach is to address the underlying cause of the problem. A cat that is dehydrated, for example, may receive intravenous or subcutaneous replacement fluids to help encourage a bowel movement.
If a change of the underlying cause is not enough to get things moving again, the veterinarian may administer an enema to your pet to help induce a bowel movement. If the cat is severely constipated, however, it may be necessary to place the cat under anesthesia and remove the feces manually. This can be a very time consuming process.
Feline Obstipation
Feline obstipation is similar to constipation, but must be treated differently. Whereas constipation is characterized by difficulty in eliminating waste, obstipation occurs when the cat’s bowels are blocked and it is unable to pass any waste at all. The cause of obstipation and the signs and symptoms of the disorder are usually the same as with constipation.
Feline Megacolon
A cat that suffers from chronic constipation or obstipation may ultimately develop Megacolon, which is a distended colon with poor movement. When this occurs, fecal matter remains in the colon and becomes continuously drier. As a result, the colon becomes filled with waste almost as hard as concrete.
Maintaining Colon Health Cat Style
Maintaining your cat’s colon health requires many of the same steps for maintaining the health of a human colon. Placing your cat on a high fiber diet, for example, will help prevent your cat from becoming constipated. Like humans, cats are unable to digest fiber. As the undigested fiber sits in your cat’s colon, it absorbs water and helps loosen the stool while also providing it with extra bulk.
Since cats tend to have more sensitive digestive systems than humans, however, it is important to implement a high fiber diet slowly. Changing your cat’s diet too abruptly can cause it to experience gas pain. Therefore, you should spend about five or seven days gradually modifying your cat’s diet.
Foods that can be added to your cat’s diet to increase its fiber intake include:
Canned pumpkin
Bran
Vegetable meal
Whole grains
Your cat may not want to eat any of these foods alone. Therefore, you will need to mix them in with your cat’s canned cat food. It is also important to ensure your cat drinks plenty of water. This is particularly important when increasing fiber consumption since the fiber will absorb water within your cat’s digestive system.
By helping your pet maintain proper colon health, its digestive problems should not be of serious concern. However, if problems arise, contact your veterinarian right away to take care of the issue before it worsens.
By: The Colon Cleansing & Constipation Resource Center
About the Author:
The Colon Cleansing & Constipation Resource Center is sponsored by Global Healing Center, Inc. The Resource Center’s website features information on constipation, articles on colon cleansing, and research on the latest treatments. For more information, please visit The Colon Cleansing & Constipation Resource Center.
Diverticulosis
The title is a little misleading. Diverticulosis is a condition in which a person has developed diverticula – small pouch-like structures – in the digestive system. Normally, they’re harmless and may persist for long periods, even a lifetime. It’s only when they become infected or inflamed that diverticulitis, the actual illness, occurs, generally to about 15% of those with diverticulosis.
The symptoms include abdominal pain, fever, nausea, and a radical change in bowel habits. The pain is often severe and may come on suddenly, usually in the lower left side of the abdomen. Vomiting is possible and constipation and/or diarrhea are common.
Those symptoms result when those marble-sized pouches rupture or become infected. The causes of the change are not known but several factors that make it more or less likely have received careful study. Simple aging is one risk factor, since it tends to produce both a weakening in portions of the intestine as well as changes in elasticity of the bowel. However, there are several risk factors that are within our control.
Lack of exercise and the often associated obesity contribute to the chances of developing diverticula, and for them to change in a harmful way. But the major cause is thought to be diet, in particular too low an intake of fiber. Fiber helps lend bulk to stools while at the same time absorbing water to keep them soft.
When the condition is allowed to develop, there are several secondary complications that may result from diverticulitis. A blockage may occur, caused by scarring. Abscesses are possible when pus collects in the pouch. But the most common and most serious, at least when the condition progresses, is peritonitis.
If a diverticulum ruptures, the contents of the digestive system spill into the abdominal cavity, which is lined with tissue called a peritoneum. The resulting inflammation is called peritonitis. When this happens, immediate care is a must, usually surgery. The toxins can poison the body in a short period, marked by symptoms such as spike in the white cells and an associated high fever.
Fortunately, that is far from a foregone conclusion. Changes to the diet – the addition of fiber mentioned above – are the simplest method of prevention and ‘treatment’. A temporary liquid diet, typically only for a few days, is another effective alternative. Antibiotics may be recommended to prevent or treat infection.
In more severe or advanced cases, corrective surgery may be required. In some cases that involves what is known as a primary bowel resection, a procedure in which the affected area is removed and the bowel sewn back together, minus that part.
What is required can, of course, only be determined by a professional diagnosis. That is typically as painless (and harmless) as having a CT (computer tomography) scan. A radiologist directs a series of computer-controlled X-ray bursts at the abdomen and the results are recorded and analyzed. A CT scan may also be performed as part of treatment, in order to guide a physician to drain any abscess that has occurred.
To head all that off, be sure to exercise regularly in an age-appropriate way, eat plenty of fiber, and drink plenty of fluids. Fiber supplements (such as Metamucil or Citrucel), properly used, are also beneficial.






