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    Cat treats for Sphynx with greasy skin

    This is a specific conversation about Cat treats — what cats actually like — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Sphynx cats are already prone to greasy skin build-up because they lack fur to absorb their natural oils — and yes, what they eat can absolutely play into that. High-fat treats, anything with added oils, or treats packed with fillers and artificial additives can nudge sebum production in the wrong direction. Cats are also notoriously fussy — they tend to go for strongly-scented, meat-based options and ignore anything sweet or grain-heavy, so the best treats are high-protein and low in junk anyway. Is this primarily for training, enrichment, or just the occasional reward — and is your Sphynx on any specific diet or dealing with anything else health-wise?
    Mainly just for rewarding her, she's pretty well-behaved! She's not on a special diet but the vet mentioned keeping fat content moderate because of the skin thing. No other health issues.
    inparticular.ai
    That's helpful — moderate fat is the right steer from your vet. For a Sphynx with oily skin, you want treats that are essentially just meat, nothing added. How does she usually respond to chicken versus fish? Some cats love both, but fish-based treats tend to have higher natural oil content, which could work against you here.
    She goes mad for chicken, not that bothered about fish actually.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — that makes this straightforward. I'd go with Thrive Premium Chicken Cat Treats. They're 100% chicken breast, nothing else — no added fat, no fillers, no preservatives. The protein content is high and the fat content is genuinely low, which is exactly what you want for a Sphynx where you're trying to avoid anything that might tip her sebum production over. They're also freeze-dried rather than cooked in oil, so there's no sneaky fat being added in the processing. Cats tend to find the smell very compelling too, so she should take to them well given she already likes chicken.
    That sounds ideal. Are they quite small? I don't want to be giving her huge chunks.
    inparticular.ai
    They're small and light — little pieces of freeze-dried chicken that you can easily break down further if you want even smaller bits. They're not dense or calorie-heavy, so they work well as frequent small rewards without adding up to much. For a cat you're treating regularly rather than using for intensive training, the portion size is very manageable.
    Great, I'll give those a try. Thanks for explaining the skin connection too — I wasn't sure if I was overthinking it.
    inparticular.ai
    You weren't overthinking it at all — it's a real consideration with Sphynxes, and most treat packaging won't flag it. Keeping treats simple and lean is genuinely the right call. Hope she loves them!

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

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