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  2. When to Worry if Your Cat Stops Eating, According to a ... - AOL

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    Even with this aggressive treatment, about 10% of cats die, so this is something that should be avoided by taking your cat in right away when not eating. 3. Immune System Failure.

  3. Obesity in Cats: 5 Vet-Approved Ways to Help Them Lose Weight

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    Overweight cats have from 10 to 20% excess fat, and obese cats are 20 to 30% over their normal weight (2). Obesity is a serious issue and has terrible health implications. The major side effects ...

  4. Feline hepatic lipidosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feline_hepatic_lipidosis

    Treatment usually involves aggressive feeding through one of several methods. Cats can have a feeding tube inserted by a veterinarian so that the owner can feed the cat a liquid diet several times a day. If the cat stops vomiting and regains its appetite, it can be fed in a food dish normally.

  5. Vet reveals how to manage food aggression in cats - AOL

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    Food aggression in cats can be challenging to deal with, but with time and patience it can be overcome. Here’s how…

  6. Hypersomatotropism (veterinary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersomatotropism...

    Cats suffering from hypersomatotropism show a multitude of symptoms, the majority of these symptoms are not useful for identifying hypersomatotropism instead of just diabetes mellitus. The presence and level of severity of symptoms vary based on levels of growth hormone excess and duration of excess secretion.

  7. Feline hyperthyroidism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feline_hyperthyroidism

    Symptoms of hypothyroidism are rare but cats with biochemical levels of thyroid hormone that falls into the hypothyroid range is common. Iatrogenic hypothyroidism presents an increased risk of azotaemia and any cat with iatrogenic hypothyroidism should have doses reduced and close monitoring following this. [2]