inparticular.ai inparticular.ai
inparticular.ai
inparticular.ai
Recent
    Independent by inparticular.ai
    2000+ deliberated stories
    2,000+ deliberated stories. Find yours.
    The Court by inparticular.ai
    Challenge any recommendation.
    Coming soon
    How inparticular.ai works Privacy Policy Affiliate Disclosure Terms of Use
    © 2026 inparticular.ai
    Independent by inparticular.ai Share →

    Cat food for sensitive stomach Burmese

    This is a specific conversation about Cat food for sensitive stomachs — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Digestive sensitivity in cats is often down to food intolerance rather than a true allergy, and limited-ingredient or novel-protein diets tend to work best for getting it under control. The extra complication in your case — feeding a sensitive cat separately when there's a healthy housemate in the mix — is one of the most common frustrations I hear about. To point you in the right direction: is it loose stools specifically, or is vomiting part of the picture too? How long has it been going on? And what are you currently feeding both cats?
    It's mainly loose stools, no vomiting. It's been happening on and off for about three months. They're both eating the same food — just a supermarket own-brand chicken wet food. The problem is my Burmese is a grazer and my other cat bolts her food, so I can't really control who's eating what.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a really clear picture, thank you. Three months of intermittent loose stools on a shared chicken-based supermarket food points strongly to a chicken or additive sensitivity — it's one of the most common triggers in cats. The grazing habit makes separate feeding tricky but not impossible, and the good news is you may not need to overhaul the routine dramatically. Before I suggest anything, a couple of quick questions: has your Burmese had a vet check in that time — anything like parasites or IBD ruled out? And is your other cat currently fine on whatever they're both eating, no issues at all?
    Yes, vet checked him about six weeks ago — parasites ruled out, vet thinks it's dietary. Other cat is absolutely fine, no problems whatsoever. Vet suggested trying a sensitive stomach food but didn't really specify which one.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — that's exactly the confirmation you need to act on. My recommendation is Royal Canin Digestive Care wet food for cats. It's formulated with highly digestible proteins, a prebiotic to support the gut lining, and a controlled fibre blend that firms up stools without causing constipation. Crucially, it's palatable enough that fussy Burmese usually take to it well, and it's nutritionally complete and balanced, so your healthy cat eating some of it occasionally isn't a problem at all. That last point matters in your situation — you don't need to stress about the odd shared mouthful. The practical approach is to make Digestive Care your Burmese's designated food, put it down in measured portions rather than leaving it out all day to reduce grazing, and keep your other cat on her current food separately. Even just feeding in different rooms for ten minutes twice a day tends to be enough once you have a food that's actively helping rather than aggravating things.
    View Royal Canin Size Health Nutrition Adult on Amazon
    That sounds manageable. Will the Royal Canin Digestive Care actually work if my other cat does sneak some? And how long before I'd expect to see an improvement?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes — Royal Canin Digestive Care is a maintenance diet, not a therapeutic prescription food, so it's perfectly safe for a healthy cat to eat some of it without any issue. You're not going to cause harm if there's the odd crossover. As for timing: most cats on a genuinely appropriate diet show noticeable improvement in stool consistency within two to three weeks. Give it a full four weeks before you judge, because the gut microbiome takes a little time to settle after a food change. Transition gradually over seven days — mix increasing amounts of the new food with the old — to avoid a temporary flare-up during the switch.
    Perfect, that's really helpful. I'll order the Royal Canin and try the separate feeding routine. Thanks.
    inparticular.ai
    You're welcome. Start the transition slowly, stick with it for four weeks, and I'd expect you to see a real difference. If the loose stools don't improve after a month on Digestive Care, it's worth going back to the vet to discuss a hydrolysed protein diet as a next step — but most cats in your Burmese's situation respond well to this first. Good luck with him.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

    CONTINUE THIS CONVERSATION →
    inparticular.ai
    Privacy Policy Affiliate Disclosure Terms of Use
    © 2026 inparticular.ai

    inparticular.ai uses AI and can make mistakes · Always consult a professional for health and safety concerns · As an Amazon Associate, inparticular.ai earns from qualifying purchases · Affiliate disclosure