So yeah here we are, still chugging away on the Creon train, one pill (Creon 10000) administered whole (i.e. swallowed) before each meal. He eats a LOT, approximately 80+g of wet food (~80 kcal) + 20+g of air-dried food (~100kcals) per meal, twice a day (sometimes with an added small supper nearer to bedtime). It's a total of approximately 360-400kcals per day, which is probably more than enough for a cat (I think?).
And yet, he's not gaining weight as much as I'd like - to recap, this is a male ragdoll kitty who weighed in around 4.7-5kg before his surgery and subsequent EPI caused by said surgery. Over a year later since the surgery (close to 1.5 years now), he's stuck at 4.4kg. Some days he fluctuates to around 4.5-4.6, some days around 4.3. For some reason he can't seem to gain weight.
What we've tried recently:
- Change of food to a more calorie-dense pate - he lost weight on this because, we suspect, it had guar gum as an ingredient, and that, being a fiber, inhibited the Creon function.
- Change of food to freshly cooked food (using a commercial subscription service) - this has so far gone terribly, he has decreased gut motility likely from his surgery (he lacks a pylorus muscle) and after just a day or two of eating freshly cooked food, he gets constipated and his system just slows down to a sluggish crawl - thus making him super, super inappetent.
So now we're back on his old food but still stuck at this weight. And now I'm wondering if it could be an issue of the Creon not working at the optimal time. So just wanted to check - for those of us with cats on Creon, are you guys sprinkling the Creon on top of wet food and feeding immediately, or are you administering the pills whole? Is it likely that there might be a difference if I tried sprinkling? I had not really wanted to previously given the risk of abrasion, but I really would like him to reach 5kg again once in his lifetime... Or is there something else that I'm missing? One other possibility I've been pondering is whether the lack of a pylorus just means his digestion is going to be crap going forward and if there's not much one can do about it at this point.
Thanks for reading, happy to provide further information upon request.
