Bells21 wrote: » What do you currently feed him? When he goes to the toilet is it runny/jelly like/ any blood in it? Is it likely that he's gotten any extra bits of fatty foods or anything over Xmas?
lulu1 wrote: » No we wouldnt really give him much other than his usual dog food even over xmas. When he is like this he would usually eat grass to make himself sick it will either do that or come out the other end. He has started to settle a bit now
McCrack wrote: » What do you give him besides his usual food?
lulu1 wrote: » we think that there must be something bringing on the flare up The thing is he cant eat when his tummy is full off wind He has hardly eaten a bite all day
Latatian wrote: » I am not a vet, ask your vet etc but my dog had pancreatitis and got something like what you describe when she ate almost anything. The royal canin gastrointestinal dry food worked wonders for her, and once we had stopped her symptoms entirely I could try different foods tosee if there was anything else she wasn't uncomfortable on. It might be worth a shot. But if you're feeding it feed literally nothing else- no scraps or titbits.
Bells21 wrote: » Have you gone to your vet with your concerns? If not it's like shooting in the dark. I think it would be wise to get some advice and then you'd be better able to make a plan to help your dog.
lulu1 wrote: we have been to the vet several times same answer every time dont give him chicken he never got that much at any time. This past few weeks we are keeping him off everything except his normal dog food and he still got the rumbling tummy although this time it didnt last the full day
Latatian wrote: » Lulu1- I got it from the vet but the large pet shops sometines have it. What is his usual dog food?
lulu1 wrote: » Latatian wrote: » Lulu1- I got it from the vet but the large pet shops sometines have it. What is his usual dog food? He eats ceaser dog food. think we may change the vet
maggiepip wrote: » What was the reason for no chicken? I've 2 collies with sensitive tummies, one of them misdiagnosed with pancreatitis so was on low fat for awhile but it didn't end up helping. The biggest helpful things for my dogs are absolutely no gluten or grains, including rice. A little potato seems to be OK. Pro Koalin Enterogenic has worked wonders for my younger dog and Slippery Elm is great for rumbly tummies. I've found the Animonda Sensitive chicken tinned food from zooplus great, it's the lowest fat grain free tinned I can find at 4% (20% on a dry matter basis) so still not exactly low fat but not as high as most. The lamb one is good too but slightly higher in fat. To be totally honest at the end of the day I had to figure it out myself through trial and error, and although had numerous vet visits I didn't get much help from them apart from antibiotics (which were needed at times)
lulu1 wrote: » maggiepip wrote: » What was the reason for no chicken? I've 2 collies with sensitive tummies, one of them misdiagnosed with pancreatitis so was on low fat for awhile but it didn't end up helping. The biggest helpful things for my dogs are absolutely no gluten or grains, including rice. A little potato seems to be OK. Pro Koalin Enterogenic has worked wonders for my younger dog and Slippery Elm is great for rumbly tummies. I've found the Animonda Sensitive chicken tinned food from zooplus great, it's the lowest fat grain free tinned I can find at 4% (20% on a dry matter basis) so still not exactly low fat but not as high as most. The lamb one is good too but slightly higher in fat. To be totally honest at the end of the day I had to figure it out myself through trial and error, and although had numerous vet visits I didn't get much help from them apart from antibiotics (which were needed at times) In her opinion a dog should not be eating anything that a human would eat
lulu1 wrote: » In her opinion a dog should not be eating anything that a human would eat
Rechuchote wrote: » I've been feeding my pup Hill's, and a neighbour who has his litter-mate ditto. She (the litter mate) has been a very picky eater all along. My pup has had a problem with diarrhoea a few times. The neighbour changed his formerly picky pup from Hill's to a fish-based puppy food (on the ingredients it's salmon, plaice, sweet potato and asparagus) brand named Grain Free and she devours it. I asked the vet, who hadn't heard of this brand ("Grain Free"), but said that if my pup's sister was doing well on it, it was worth my changing. I changed him yesterday and he likes it, and has no more diarrhoea (though this may reflect the antibiotic shot the vet gave him just in case, and the worm tablet, and the probiotic course). Has anyone come across this as a brand? Any opinions of it?