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Is Chocolate POISONING Your Furry Friend Without You Knowing 00:00:00 Intro 00:00:41 Can cats have chocolate? 00:01:40 Can cats eat onions? 00:02:28 Can cats have garlic? 00:03:18 Can cats eat raisins? 00:04:15 Can cats have salt? 00:05:07 Outro You think the danger is only in sweets… then your cat licks a “tiny bite” of leftovers and things go sideways fast. This video breaks down the real hidden risks in your kitchen: chocolate, onions, garlic, raisins, and salt—what they do, where they hide, and when it’s time to call the vet. 🔥 One “tiny bite” isn’t a small risk for a cat—because their safety margin is razor-thin. Here’s what we cover (simple, practical, no fluff): Can cats have chocolate? No. Treat chocolate like poison (theobromine risk). Dark/baking chocolate is more concentrated. Can cats eat onions? No. Onion (and onion powder) can damage red blood cells and may lead to anemia—often from repeated “small exposures.” Can cats have garlic? No. Garlic is also an Allium; garlic powder can be highly concentrated and sneaky in ingredient lists. Can cats eat raisins? No. Grapes/raisins are linked to serious kidney damage in pets—and reactions can be unpredictable. Can cats have salt? Cats need sodium in a complete diet, but salty human food is not safe to share—it can drive dehydration and electrolyte trouble, especially in sensitive cats. ✅ Practical “kitchen rule”: If it’s seasoned, sauced, processed, spicy, or “leftovers”—assume it’s not for cats. Watch for onion/garlic powder in soups, deli meats, snacks, fast food, and spice blends. 🚨 Red flags to take seriously (don’t wait): vomiting/diarrhea, extreme thirst, weakness, wobbliness, tremors, pale gums, fast breathing, lethargy, or “just not themselves.” If you suspect ingestion, contact your vet ASAP. If this helped, Like and Subscribe for the next video on safe human foods you can actually share. #cats #cathealth #petcare #chocolate #onion #garlic #raisins #salt