John Popp
Site Supporter
From the look of things about the only dietary change I would consider is reducing the bone content of her raw food. Not eliminating bone from her diet, but mixing in about 20% of boneless grind to her raw food. In nature a cat will eat all the bone in small prey, but with larger prey they will leave some of the heavier bones such as the thigh bones. That should get your UA numbers back in line and reduce the chances of the issue popping up again.
Glad everything is going OK and hopefully this issue hasn't created any longer term litter box aversion.
Glad everything is going OK and hopefully this issue hasn't created any longer term litter box aversion.