When our own cats have faced low potassium tied to kidney concerns, we learned fast that the supplement format matters as much as the ingredient. In our evaluation we found that powders blend into wet food well for some cats, while gels suit the ones who refuse anything dusted on a meal. We looked at potassium gluconate and potassium citrate options, checked label transparency against manufacturer specs, and folded in aggregated owner feedback on taste and consistency. Potassium supplementation is a veterinary matter, so we treat these as tools you use under guidance, not as something to start on your own. Always have your vet confirm a diagnosis and target dose before you begin, because too much potassium is as dangerous as too little.

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