| Many years ago, our Thlay Roo had an abcess. The explanation, as I understood
it, is that cat skin is much "looser" than human skin, so a puncture wound
(like a cat bite) tends to produce an infection between the skin and the
tissue underneath. Because of all the free space, this fills up with pus
and becomes the abcess.
Naturally, the essence of the treatment.
is to drain the infected area. (I think that in Thlay's case, the vet
actually inserted hydrogen peroxide under the skin to clean it out!!!)
But anyways, I wouldn't be surprised if they want to leave the incisions
open to keep it from getting inflamed again before the infection is 100%
gone. (But I don't know what standard procedure is -- why don't you give
your vet a call and check?)
-Neil
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| Abscesses are bacterial infections in or under the skin. Cats tend to get
them because they don't immediately wash out wounds with clean water and
apply tincture of merthiolate or antibiotics when they get a cut the way
people do. The two most common kinds of wounds are scratches and bites from
fighting (these mostly appear on the stomach) and self-inflicted scratches
from ear mites (these abscesses occur behind the ears).
The treatment is to drain the pus from the wound, which involves exposing the
abscess to air and squeezing the pus out (for small abscesses) or inserting
a drain (for large ones). After draining the abscess, you clean out the
wound and disinfect it (this is where the hydrogen peroxide comes in). Then
you allow it to heal.
The cuts are left unsutured so that any remaining pus or foreign matter in
the wound can continue to drain and be exposed to oxygen (which kills off
anaerobic bacteria). If the vet sutured all the incisions, then the abscess
might just re-form.
--PSW
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