After reading online, I think my 18 year old cat has feline dementia. Do you have a cat with feline dementia, and if so, what are your experiences? How do you make him/her more comfortable?

We had a cat for the last year of her life, who had dementia. She was between 18 and 20 when she died. We tried to keep the furniture mostly in the same spots, keep to a routine, and give her a lot of snuggle time.As she got worse, we guided her mostly by the sounds of our voices (used for blind cats, but also helps with dementia because it triggers their memory more than other senses do).

We observed her for signals of what she wanted to do (eat, use the box, etc. ) and helped her when she needed help with things. Mainly, she wanted to be close to us whatever we were doing. We put human baby lap pads on the couch and the laundry basket and a waterproof bed pad on the bed when we weren't home, in case she decided to use those instead of the box.

If she isolated herself, which cats with dementia (and other serious illnesses) do when they don't know what to do, we would pick her up and bring her with us whatever we were doing (watching tv, typing, etc.) so she would know that we loved her.

Our now-oldest cat is 9, and starting to experience the same symptoms, so we are starting to do these things for him. Our other cats adjust and try to help in their own way. Our alpha cat, 2 years old, walks with the 9-year-old one everywhere, making sure he is doing ok.

Dementia in cats is becoming alot more common as cats are living alot longer. I just recently left NYC and the business that I was in had alot of older people that shopped our stores, and most of the ladies had cats. There was one lady that had a cat that she swore was 30 years old, but I talked with several about their older cats and dementia was always brought up.

One lady swore that what you needed to do was bright up their life with eating, and gave all of her older cats fish oil, and she had some valid points as omega fatty acids do helps as antioxidants, but she swore that it gave her cats bursts of energy. She also told me that, just like us as we age, our bathroom habits start to change. What she did was simply place several litter boxes around her house, and that made her cats alot more comfortable.

Most dementia habits will happen at night. She also told me she finally got a flashlight and two stuffed mice. When her cats would wake up in the middle of the night, as she described, almost crying, she would take these mice, shine the flashlight on them, kick the stuffed mice a bit, and let the cats chase them.It brought some life and fun back to them, but it also helped to relax them and they would sleep the rest of the night.

But the kicker was the final thing she told me. Feed your cat some yogurt. I have done alot of research on yogurt and pets since then, and she was absolutely correct.

Plain yogart, keep it plain, has enzymes that help to fight fungi and bacteria, but it is especially effective for gas. And older cats get alot of gas, you just may not know it all of the time. Once the gas goes away, you older cat immediately feels better--hope this helps.

Sorry KT, I do not intend to answer your question AS I DO NOT HAVE THE KNOWLEDGE. However, I just want an opportunity to answer the ridiculous answer to your question from the so called 'Answer man' who is obviously not an animal lover. You must be such a sad and pathetic individual to sign on to a forum specifically for animal lovers, just in an attempt to show off your 'impressive' (in your view) humour, distorted opinions, pointless intelligence, and seriously warped sense of humour.

Go back to your room in your MOM'S house, with your pile of playboy magazines and tv to at least make you think you are a part of society and stay there. Your intelligence is wasted on you. I seriously hate wasted intelligence and you sir are a prime example.Be a doctor or something where you can use your intelligence for good means.

Hold on, what am I on about? To write a post like you did, I think means YOU NEED A DOCTOR!

Sorry KT, I do not intend to answer your question AS I DO NOT HAVE THE KNOWLEDGE. However, I just want an opportunity to answer the ridiculous answer to your question from the so called 'Answer man' who is obviously not an animal lover. You must be such a sad and pathetic individual to sign on to a forum specifically for animal lovers, just in an attempt to show off your 'impressive' (in your view) humour, distorted opinions, pointless intelligence, and seriously warped sense of humour.

Go back to your room in your MOM'S house, with your pile of playboy magazines and tv to at least make you think you are a part of society and stay there. Your intelligence is wasted on you. I seriously hate wasted intelligence and you sir are a prime example.

Be a doctor or something where you can use your intelligence for good means. Hold on, what am I on about? To write a post like you did, I think means YOU NEED A DOCTOR!

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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