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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How to manage a hospitalized cat that stops eating

By Taylor, Samantha et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2022·International Society of Feline Medicine, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: 2022 ISFM Consensus Guidelines on Management of the Inappetent Hospitalised Cat.

Species:
cat
Cat not eatingAppetite & weightCats

Plain-English summary

A hospitalized cat that wasn't eating could be facing serious health risks, including delayed recovery and weakened immunity. It's important for veterinarians to assess the cat's nutritional needs quickly and address any underlying issues like pain or stress that might be affecting its appetite. Treatments may include medications to stimulate appetite and reduce nausea, as well as feeding tubes for those who need extra help getting nutrition. These tubes are usually well-tolerated and can significantly improve the cat's condition when used promptly.

Abstract

PRACTICAL RELEVANCE: Inappetence may have many origins and, as a presenting sign or observation in the hospitalised patient, is common in feline practice. Nutritional assessment of every patient is encouraged, to identify the need for, and appropriate type of, intervention indicated. The impact of malnutrition may be significant on the feline patient, perpetuating illness, delaying recovery, slowing wound healing and negatively impacting gut health and immunity. Delayed intervention may result in the cat's deterioration; hence prompt control of contributing factors such as the underlying illness, pain, nausea, ileus and stress is vital to optimise voluntary food intake. Management is multimodal, comprising reduction of stress, medications and assisted nutrition in the form of tube feeding or parenteral nutrition. Use of antiemetic, analgesic, prokinetic and appetite stimulant medications may restore appetite, but placement of feeding tubes should not be delayed. Feeding tubes are generally well tolerated and allow provision of food, water and medication with minimal stress, although clinicians must be aware of complications such as stoma site infections and refeeding syndrome. CLINICAL CHALLENGES: Cats are vulnerable to malnutrition owing to their unique metabolism and specific nutritional requirements. Moreover, their nature as a species means they are susceptible to stress in the hospital environment, which may result in reduced food intake; previous negative experiences may compound the problem. In particular, an inappropriate clinic environment and/or handling may cause or exacerbate inappetence in hospitalised patients, with negative impacts on recovery. Postponing interventions such as feeding tube placement to await improvement, owing to clinician or caregiver apprehension, may hinder recovery and worsen nutritional deficits. EVIDENCE BASE: The 2022 ISFM Consensus Guidelines on Management of the Inappetent Hospitalised Cat have been created by a panel of experts brought together by the International Society of Feline Medicine (ISFM). Information is based on the available literature, expert opinion and the panel members' experience.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35775307/