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Thanks for all the above notes. My 11 year old Corgi has been having the no eating/bloody stools off and and for about 4 years now. Have had so many stool samples done, vet says they were normal and that this just happens once in a while. Well these past 5 months its been happening every 2 weeks or so - and last week at the vet he said to change her food to a more "sensitive" diet. I'm wondering if its just the protein - she is getting Chicken Blues Wellness food - I will change to the sensitive formula with fish/sweet potatoe and see how this works.- just reading the note above by Abolone_Chan and I will also look at Royal Canin Instestinal GI 30 (not sure if this is a supplement?) THanks everyone....
Hi Laura - well, I took your advice for my PWC "Dreamer" and just purchased the Natural Balance Potato and Duck - she loves it...so now its just a wait and see. Thanks for your input!!! Thanks! Sue C.
If you are having good luck with the new food Ein is on I wouldn't change it just for "variety". I don't think they much care. I say if it ain't broke don't fix it.
Our first dog had this problem. It was exactly as you described with the bloody mucous around/in it. It also had a nasty odor (different than regular dog stool). It was Dx'd as the doggie version of irritable bowel syndrome. We put her on a mix of 1/2 regular kibble and 1/2 low residue kibble (special order from vet-- I think it was Science Diet or IAMs or similar; not the greatest but it did the trick; can't remember how $$$ it was). She just flat out refused to eat 100% special kibble. When she'd not eat breakfast, we knew she would be about to have an episode and we would give no food for a day with only ice chips for liquid, then rice & low fat yogurt for a day or two, then gradually add the kibble mix into it. She'd go for months between bouts. Even too much water would upset her tummy when in the midst of a spell.
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