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Ask the vet’s pets: Many ways to get medications into cats

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Dear Christopher Cat: I adopted my grandmother’s cat, Sally, who is supposed to take medication but often puts up a fight. How do I get her to take her pills?

Christopher responds: One of my feline siblings, Carlie, happily takes her medication. Let me share Mom’s technique, hoping it may work for you.

While Carlie is eating yummy canned food, Mom tips her head up, opens her mouth and drops the pill on the back of her tongue. Then Mom praises her and lets her resume eating.

Offering tasty food before giving the pill lubricates the throat, which facilitates swallowing. The food reward afterward ensures the pill finds its way to the stomach and helps make the procedure easier the next time.

Another way to give a pill is to hide it inside a tasty treat, such as a Pill Pocket. Pill Pockets come in a variety of flavors and are available at animal hospitals and pet supply stores.

If Sally still refuses, try a pet piller, also called a pill popper. These handy devices come in different styles and are available at animal hospitals and pet supply stores. Remember to praise Sally and reward her with food or a treat.

If pilling continues to be a challenge, ask Sally’s veterinarian about an alternative dosage form. Some medications are available as flavored liquids, long-acting injections or transdermal gels that are rubbed onto the ear flap and absorbed through the skin.

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Dear Daisy Dog: When I donated blood this week, I saw a poster asking for dogs to donate blood when the bloodmobile comes to the parking lot one day next month. I had no idea my dog could donate blood to help other dogs. What’s involved in canine blood donation?

Daisy responds: The U.S. has more than 80 community-based canine blood donation programs that provide whole blood and blood products, such as packed red blood cells and concentrated platelets.

Blood products are used to treat dogs with traumatic injuries and toxic conditions, such as destruction of red blood cells after ingestion of zinc pennies or inability to clot blood after anti-coagulant rodenticide exposure.

The ideal canine blood donor is healthy, calm enough to sit still throughout the donation procedure, at least 55 pounds (since one pint of blood is drawn), between age one and middle-age, and up to date on vaccinations. The dog should take no medications except preventives for heartworms, intestinal parasites, fleas and ticks.

Most programs prefer donor dogs with a DEA 1.1 negative (“universal”) blood type, so the blood bank will probably test your dog’s blood before taking the donation.

If your dog qualifies, the blood bank will perform a routine wellness blood panel and test for blood-borne infectious diseases.

You’ll receive those test results, and your dog will go home with a goodie bag. More importantly, you will know your dog helped save other dogs’ lives through his blood donation.

Ask the Vet’s Pets appears Friday. The animal authors of the column live with Lee Pickett, V.M.D., who practices companion animal medicine. Contact them at www.askthevetspets.com.