SPECIAL REPORT  ·  CKD CAT HEALTH  ·  NUTRITION SCIENCE

I Lost My First CKD Cat at 14. 
My Second Cat Just Turned 16.

The Only Difference Was Something Nobody Told Me at the First Diagnosis.

Willow did everything right. She ate every meal. Her bloodwork was called 'stable.' And she still wasted away in front of me because there was a second process running in her body that nobody named until it was too late. This is the information I wish someone had handed me the day I drove home with that first bag of renal food.

Community Health Series  

A Warning for Newly Diagnosed CKD Cat Owner  ·  Reading time: 4–5 minutes

⚠️  Before you read — who this is for:

If your cat was recently diagnosed with CKD and you are doing everything the vet said — the renal food, the fluids, the bloodwork schedule — and something in the back of your mind is still saying 'is this enough?' — this article is specifically for you. I am not a vet. I am someone who lost one cat to this disease and kept a second one alive past the age the first one ever reached. The difference between those two outcomes is what you're about to read.

She was eating every single meal right up until the end.

Willow was diagnosed with Stage 2 kidney disease when she was 12 years old. She was my first cat. My entire world, honestly. The kind of cat who had a permanent spot on the left side of your chest and knew your schedule better than you did.

 

The day we got the diagnosis I drove home, put the bag of Hill's k/d on the kitchen counter, and sat on the floor with her for about an hour. Then I pulled myself together and built the protocol. Renal food, same day. Water fountain, that week. Bloodwork every few months. I found the CKD forums and read everything. I did everything I was supposed to do.

 

And she ate. I want you to hear that. She ate every single meal. Sometimes she'd ask for more. Her appetite was actually better than it had been before the diagnosis. So every day I told myself: she's eating. We're okay.

 

But she was getting smaller. Not lighter on the scale — the scale said she was stable. But smaller. Specifically smaller in the back. The haunches. The hips. I could feel things when I picked her up that I couldn't feel six months before. I told myself I was being paranoid.

 

I wasn't being paranoid.

 

Around month fourteen her hind legs started going a little wobbly on the hardwood floor. Her toes would curl under slightly when she walked. She started hesitating before the windowsill she'd jumped to every single morning of her adult life. And one morning she looked at that windowsill and she just didn't try.

"She used to zoom. She used to chirp at the birds through the glass. She used to own every room she walked into. I kept telling myself she was just having a bad day."

The vet said it was time.

 

I drove home alone. I sat in the car park for a long time. And then I spent two years going back through every appointment, every decision, every month of that eighteen-month protocol trying to find the thing I missed. The thing I did wrong. The reason this happened when I had been doing everything right and she had been eating every meal.

 

I never found the answer. Because I didn't know the right question.

Miso was diagnosed eighteen months after I lost Willow.

I almost didn't go back to the vet. I know how that sounds. But after Willow I was genuinely not sure I could sit in that room again and hear that word and carry that weight home a second time. I went because not going wasn't actually an option — because I loved Miso exactly as much as I loved Willow and the moment I started avoiding the information to protect myself was the moment I stopped being her advocate.

 

The diagnosis came on a Tuesday. Stage 2 kidney disease, early presentation. The vet was kind and thorough. She walked me through the protocol: the renal diet, the water intake, the bloodwork schedule. She handed me the discharge sheet. She said we caught it early and that was good.

 

I sat in the car park for a long time again. But this time I was thinking something different.

 

I was thinking: I know where this goes. I know exactly where this goes. I have watched every stage of it. I cannot carry another empty carrier to this car.

 

And then I did something I hadn't done with Willow: I took the diagnosis apart.

 

Not the kidney piece. The vet had the kidney piece covered. I mean the piece that I'd never found an answer to — why Willow wasted away despite eating every meal. Why the muscle loss ran ahead of everything else. Why the protocol did exactly what it was supposed to do and the outcome still came the way it did.

 

I was on Reddit at midnight, three tabs deep, and I found a thread that stopped me cold. Someone had written something about uremic toxins and gut lining damage. I'd never seen those two words in the same sentence before. I kept reading.

There were two things going wrong at the same time. I only knew about one of them.

Here's what I found. And I want to be clear that I'm not a vet and I'm not making clinical claims — I'm a person who spent two years looking for the answer to why her cat wasted away and found it in a veterinary nutrition forum at midnight.

The first problem: the renal diet was protecting her kidneys and starving her muscle.

The renal diet restricts protein. That's exactly the right call for the kidneys — lower protein means less phosphorus and less nitrogen waste for compromised kidneys to process. The vet is right to prescribe it.

 

But cats are not able to slow down their own protein breakdown the way humans can. When you reduce dietary protein, a human body adapts. A cat's body doesn't. It continues breaking down protein at the same rate. And when there isn't enough coming in through the food — the body goes looking for it somewhere else.

 

The somewhere else is muscle. Every day. Quietly. While the bloodwork says 'stable.' Because the bloodwork is measuring kidney filtration — not what is happening to the muscle at the same time.

 

Willow was eating every meal. The renal diet was doing its job perfectly. And her body was simultaneously breaking down the muscle it needed to survive because the dietary protein had been lowered to protect her kidneys and there was nothing in the protocol specifically designed to fill that gap.

 

That's the first problem. And it's the one that most owners eventually piece together, usually around month six or seven when the spine starts becoming visible under the hands.

The second problem — the one I never found until after Willow was gone.

Kidney disease doesn't only damage the kidneys. The waste products that compromised kidneys can't fully filter — they accumulate in the bloodstream. And one of the places those accumulated uremic toxins do damage is the gut lining.

The gut lining degrades. The microbiome shifts. The gut's ability to absorb amino acids — the specific building blocks that muscle tissue needs to maintain itself — gets progressively compromised.

So here's what was happening to Willow:

The renal diet was reducing the protein supply to protect the kidneys. At the same time, CKD was destroying the gut's ability to absorb even the reduced protein she was getting. Supply cut. Delivery broken. Muscle wasting from both ends. Simultaneously. Silently. While the bloodwork said she was being managed correctly — because the bloodwork measures kidney filtration, and both of those processes were happening in entirely different systems.

This is why she ate every meal and still wasted away. The food arrived. The gut couldn't finish the job. The amino acids that her muscle needed most — to maintain the tissue in her haunches, her hind legs, her spine — weren't getting through in sufficient amounts regardless of how much she ate.

 

Nobody told me this was happening. It wasn't on the discharge sheet. It wasn't in the standard protocol. It didn't show up in the bloodwork because it wasn't what the bloodwork was designed to measure.
 

I spent two years trying to find what I did wrong. I didn't do anything wrong. I just didn't know this second process existed.

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With Miso, I addressed both problems from the start.

I took what I had found back to my vet. She looked at it carefully — the amino acid supply piece, the gut absorption piece, the specific dual mechanism. She said it was consistent with what she knew about CKD nutrition and that it was compatible with the existing protocol.

 

So I added it. A targeted amino acid supplement combined with a prebiotic and probiotic complex designed to address both failures simultaneously. Not instead of the renal diet — alongside it. Not replacing the fluids or the bloodwork — in addition to them. The protocol Miso already had, with the missing piece added.

 

The amino acid component: — the specific building blocks that muscle protein synthesis requires, formulated without the phosphorus and nitrogen load that makes standard dietary protein harmful for compromised kidneys. The muscle gets what it needs. The kidneys don't pay the price.

 

The gut component: working on the gut lining itself. Prebiotic FOS and inulin feeding the beneficial bacteria that uremic toxin damage depletes. A digestive enzyme blend supporting nutrient absorption upstream of the problem.
 

Both pieces. Together. From the start. The two failures that ran silently through Willow's entire illness, addressed simultaneously, before they had eighteen months to compound.

What I want to be honest about:

I cannot tell you that Willow would have survived longer if I had known this. I don't know that. CKD is a progressive disease and there are no guarantees. What I know is that the specific mechanism that drove her muscle loss — two simultaneous failures that the standard protocol was never designed to address — was treatable. And I didn't know it was treatable until after she was gone. That question is the one I've had to put down because there's nowhere good for it to go.

She just turned 16. Willow never got there.

I'm not going to tell you this is a miracle story. Miso still has kidney disease. She still gets the renal food and the fluids and the bloodwork every few months. She is still a managed cat with a progressive disease. I am still the person who lies awake sometimes thinking about what comes next.

 

But at month two I noticed she wasn't pausing at the windowsill anymore. She was just jumping. The way she used to before the diagnosis — without the small calculation I'd started watching for, the specific beat of hesitation that I recognised from Willow's last six months.

 

At month four the vet ran her hands along Miso's back and said her muscle condition looked better than the last visit. For a CKD cat at her stage. Better. That's not a word I ever heard about Willow.

"She looks really good, Mum." — my daughter, six months after the diagnosis, watching Miso walk around the kitchen at 15 years old.

Last week Miso turned 16. We made a small thing of it. She ate her breakfast, walked to her windowsill, and sat in the morning light the same way she has every day since I added the second piece to her protocol. Present. Alert. Still curious about the birds in the garden.

 

She is older now than Willow ever got.

 

I don't say that triumphantly. I say it with the specific grief of someone who understands exactly what the difference was and can't unknow it. The protocol Miso has is the protocol Willow should have had. The information existed. I just didn't find it in time.

Because you're in the window I didn't know existed with Willow.

If you just got this diagnosis — if your cat is in Stage 2, eating well, bloodwork described as stable, the protocol running correctly — you are in the best possible position you will ever be in with this disease.

 

The muscle your cat has right now is infinitely easier to maintain than it will be to try to recover later. The gut lining that is beginning to degrade right now will be far more difficult to repair in six months than it is today. The two processes that I described — amino acid supply failure and gut absorption failure — are running in your cat's body right now, today, at the same time as you're reading this. They don't announce themselves. They don't show up in the bloodwork. They compound quietly for months until one day you're running your hands along your cat's back and feeling something that wasn't there before.

 

You have the window I didn't have with Willow. That is not a small thing. That is everything.

The supplement I use with Miso — the one that addresses both the amino acid piece and the gut repair piece together, specifically formulated for cats with compromised kidneys — is called Norella Muscle & Vitality Support. I'll leave the link. I'm not getting anything for writing this.

I'm writing it because I spent two years wishing someone had left this link for me. And because the person who just got the diagnosis today — the one who is sitting on the floor with their cat right now trying to hold it together — deserves to find this information at week three, not at month twenty.

Here is what you're actually choosing between.

 

Option one: continue with the standard protocol. The renal diet, the fluids, the bloodwork. Everything the vet said. All of it correct. None of it addressing the two secondary processes that the standard protocol was never designed to cover.

 

Option two: the same protocol, with one daily addition that specifically targets both failures — the amino acid supply and the gut absorption — in a formula that was built for kidney cats, not adapted for them. Compatible with everything already on the protocol. Your vet will confirm it when you mention it at the next visit. Most respond with some version of: 'that looks appropriate for what you're managing.'

 

You have ninety days to decide whether it's working. If it isn't — if you don't notice a difference in the way your cat carries themselves, in the spine check, in the way they approach their usual jumps — you get every dollar back. No conditions.

 

What you cannot get back is the window. The weeks between now and month six, when the processes I've described have had another six weeks to compound. I know what those months cost because I lived them. You don't have to.

Norella's probiotic and prebiotic strains were selected specifically for their role in restoring gut epithelial integrity — rebuilding the absorption surface that uremic toxins degrade. When the lining is repaired, the amino acids in Part 1 of the formula can actually get through. This is why the sequence matters: repair the delivery system, then supply the building blocks. Both in the same daily formula. Both working simultaneously.

 

This is the combination no other CKD cat supplement has assembled: not because it's impossible, but because no one was looking at both sides of the failure at the same time.

The formula your cat's muscles have been missing — finally built around how CKD actually works.

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How to Use Norella — Three Steps, Zero Complexity

Norella was designed to integrate seamlessly into the daily routine you've already built around your cat's care. No special timing windows, no dietary changes, no secondary protocols to manage.

Step 1: Measure

Use the included scoop for your cat's weight. 1 full scoop for cats under 11 lbs, 2 full scoop for 11 lbs and over.

Step 2: Mix in

Mix into your cat's regular wet or renal food once daily. No separate timing, no empty-stomach requirements.

Step 3: Track

Run for the full 6–8 weeks. Most owners feel a physical change before they see one. The spine-check becomes something different.

What Makes Norella Different

  • Addresses gut absorption — not just amino acids

  • Zero phosphorus burden on the kidneys

  • Works alongside any renal diet & vet protocol 

  • 90-Day satisfaction guarantee, no questions asked 

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What Cat Owners Are Saying After 8 Weeks on Norella

The The wobble score finally moved

Gohan is 16, Stage 3, fourteen months managed. I tried other supplements. Both helped something — neither fixed it. I kept a wobble score in my phone, zero to five, checking his gait every morning. It had been sitting at 3 for two months without moving. Six weeks into Norella it went to 2. By week nine he jumped onto the couch arm without the scramble at the top. That scramble had been there for seven months. I know what it means that it's gone. It was just... less sharp. That was enough for me.

D.M., Portland (Chester)

Verified Buyer

Finally something that addresses both sides

I'd been in the CKD forums for over a year trying to understand why the amino acid supplements kept hitting a ceiling. The forum answers weren't wrong — they just kept addressing the supply side. When I understood the gut absorption piece, everything I'd observed suddenly had an explanation. By week eight his hind legs were steadier on the hardwood. His haunches had some shape back. My vet looked at him at the next check-in and 

T.L., Austin (Oliver)

Verified Buyer

He stopped bracing before every jump

Chester is 15 and I've been managing Stage 2 for almost a year. His labs have been stable, which I was grateful for. But I kept noticing that physically he felt different — thinner, bonier along the spine. About six weeks into Norella I noticed I wasn't doing the spine-check the same way anymore. It wasn't that the number changed on the scale. It was that I stopped bracing myself every time I touched him.to a couch. She understood.

M.K., Denver (Gohan)

Verified Buyer

The outside finally matched the inside

My vet kept telling me his labs were great and I kept thinking — okay, but he looks different than six months ago. After two months on Norella I finally felt like the outside matched the inside for the first time. He started jumping on the couch without the scramble at the top. That sounds small. It wasn't small to me.

K.R., Seattle (Miso)

Verified Buyer

I tried two other supplements before this. They helped a little — maybe. Norella was the first time I saw consistent change. By week eight his hind legs were steadier on the hardwood floor. His haunches had some shape back. My vet looked at him at the next check-in and said 'he looks better.' Not the labs. Him. That's the one I was waiting to hear.

Questions CKD Cat Owners Ask Before Trying Norella

I've already tried other supplements. Why would Norella produce different results?

Because they were solving one of the two failures, not both. AminAvast and MYOS address the amino acid supply problem — they provide targeted building blocks without phosphorus burden. What they don't address is the gut absorption failure: the damage uremic toxins have done to the intestinal lining that was blocking those amino acids from getting through efficiently. Norella combines the amino acid supply with probiotics and prebiotics specifically formulated to repair that gut lining. That's the variable that was missing from every approach you tried — and the reason for the plateau.let's see how he responds.'

Is it safe to add alongside my cat's current renal protocol?

Yes. Norella was specifically designed to complement existing CKD management — not compete with it. The amino acid profile was chosen to avoid adding phosphorus or nitrogen burden to the kidneys. It supports the muscles without undermining the kidney protection your vet has already put in place. Most owners mention it at their next renal check-in. The response they consistently report is: that looks compatible with what you're already doing.is better. But month eight is not too late.

Is it too late if the muscle loss and hind leg weakness have been going on for months?

Muscle responds faster than most owners expect once both failures are addressed simultaneously — not just the supply side, but the absorption side. The 6–8 week timeline reflects real-world outcomes from owners who started after months of visible hind leg decline, including those who had already hit a ceiling with other supplements. Fixing the gut absorption piece removes the ceiling. Earlier is better. But several months in is not too late.. That's the specific difference.

What if it doesn't work for my cat?

There's a 90-day satisfaction guarantee: if you don't see a meaningful difference in your cat's muscle condition, energy level, and physical presence within 90 days, you pay nothing. You can reach the team at shopnorella.com for a full refund with no questions asked. The 90-day window is intentional — it covers the full timeline of the gut repair and muscle response cycle.

How long until I notice a change?

The formula begins at the gut level first — weeks one and two are about repairing the absorption surface, which is invisible but essential. Most owners notice improved energy and appetite engagement around weeks three to four as absorption improves. The physical change most owners describe — the spine-check feeling different, the hind legs steadier, the jump landing cleaner — typically arrives in the week six to eight window. Run the full 90-day trial before drawing conclusions.

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The only CKD cat supplement formulated around both the amino acid gap and the gut absorption failure — designed to work alongside your vet's protocol, not against it.

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The Missing Half of Every CKD Supplement You've Tried

  • Addresses gut absorption — not just amino acids

  • Zero phosphorus burden on the kidneys

  • Works alongside any renal diet & vet protocol  

  • 90-Day satisfaction guarantee, no questions asked  

CHECK AVAILABILITY

✔️ 90-Day Money-Back Guarantee

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