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What if it's the bowls? I bought China made ceramics, but writing all over. Much print writing was all heavy metal based before moving to soy.

What if it's the water? I always gave them Alexapure water until a few years ago switched to Deer Park because my source water is so shit.

What if the food? I got a huge accidental purchase of $800 worth of cat food for $450 before of was delisted. Was a new product. New being unsafe or just fish causing liver damage from mercury?

I'm kind of leaning to the food. He never had fish before 12 years, 6 months later severe liver damage? It was only salmon.

I think that's the cause. I'll ask my vet and my friend who is a vet

What if it's the bowls? I bought China made ceramics, but writing all over. Much print writing was all heavy metal based before moving to soy. What if it's the water? I always gave them Alexapure water until a few years ago switched to Deer Park because my source water is so shit. What if the food? I got a huge accidental purchase of $800 worth of cat food for $450 before of was delisted. Was a new product. New being unsafe or just fish causing liver damage from mercury? I'm kind of leaning to the food. He never had fish before 12 years, 6 months later severe liver damage? It was only salmon. I think that's the cause. I'll ask my vet and my friend who is a vet

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8 comments

[–] PMYA 2 points (+2|-0)

Salmon shouldn't cause any issues with mercury, levels are pretty low. Unless it was raw, raw salmon isn't good for them and would probably end up causing problems.

[–] jobes [OP] 2 points (+2|-0)

Some tuna too, obviously both cooked. Much more salmon tho. FDA says 10 oz of fish, low mercury is fine. So for a 10lb cat, safe levels may be half to eight tenths of an oz based on body weight. Might have better livers, actually sending bloodwork to a feline liver researcher so will see if my guess holds water.