Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
All I know about your second cat is their age and that they have chronic diarrhoea and a mate who needs to be euthanased. This sounds like a difficult time for them, but nothing you've told me about this cat points to a solution as severe as euthanasia. To be anthropormorphic about it, nobody suggested euthanasing my Dad when my Mum died. Of course, this cat might turn out to have lymphoma or cancer and a deterioration to be imminent, so euthanasia may be on the cards in that event. But on the other hand, they might be stressed because their mate is ill and that diarrhoea may settle, or they might be hyperthyroid or wormy or have chronic pancreatitis, which can all be treated. Therefore I would reccommend taking one cat at a time and finding the cause of this one's ailments. Euthanasia is seldom a solution for an animals' greif. The exception to this is if you were to feel that the second cat is suffering and you do not have the resources to help them. I think that most vets would be sympathetic to that.
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