T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1214.1 | | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Fri Mar 25 1988 14:42 | 4 |
| This is not something I've ever seen my cats do.
I'd make a trip to the vet regardless.
Donna
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1214.2 | | PBA::DALEY | | Fri Mar 25 1988 14:58 | 3 |
| I agree with Donna - this sounds like a trip to the vet
is in order - and perhaps very soon. Pat
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1214.3 | VET | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | | Fri Mar 25 1988 15:01 | 8 |
| I just called the vet, he said this is not normal and could be Asthma,
I have to bring her in Monday, I read a note in this file about
feline Asthma and did not like what I read. Do any of you have
a cat with Asthma ? If Tisha does have Asthma and they want to
put her on medication, should I let them ? From what I have read
this could cause kidney damage. Tisha is only seven months old
and a very fresh little girl but, I do love her and want to do what
is best for her.
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1214.4 | ENOUGH | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | | Fri Mar 25 1988 15:15 | 4 |
| ENOUGH IS ENOUGH. I have been franticly going through this note
file, the more I read the more scared I get. I just called the
vet and got an appointment for tommorow. I will let you know Monday
how I made out.
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1214.5 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Fri Mar 25 1988 15:22 | 4 |
| Stay calm. I agree that she should go to the vet, but maybe "breathing
really weird" is because she has a hairball, or due to some other
cause besides Asthma.
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1214.6 | | PBA::DALEY | | Fri Mar 25 1988 15:30 | 19 |
| I thought of asthma when I was replying but didn't put it
into the note. One of my cats has asthma, and is - IS DOING
FINE --- so please - if it is asthma - don't panic. My Daisy has had
it for about the past three or four years (she is about 9 years
old). Sometimes it is bad and she takes medication for a short time
and it helps but she hasn't had an episode for a year now. Just
within the past couple weeks her breathing is harder off and on
during the day and/or night - I think maybe it has something to do
with the change in weather and things that go along with the
change - maybe pollens. Sometimes I put on a humidifier and I think
her breathing is easier. In any case- I also think MY REACTION to
her breathing is worse than her actual condition. Also, I wonder
is stress can trigger an asthma attack. Again - after four years
of this condition - which only appears once or twice a year -
Daisy is fine 98% of the time, and the other 2% of the time I am
definately worse than she is.
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1214.7 | Don't panic yet | VAXWRK::LEVINE | | Fri Mar 25 1988 15:39 | 8 |
|
Maybe we need a better definition of what "breathing really weird" means.
Does it sort of sound like whooping (ie - the cat goes "whoop whoop")?
If so, the problem is most probably hairballs, especially if this is a
long-haired cat. I'm not familiar with asthma, but I'm real familiar
with the sounds of bringing up a hairball.
Pam
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1214.8 | wheezing | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | | Fri Mar 25 1988 15:53 | 3 |
| RE:.7
Tisha is a Siamese. Her breathing is more a wheezing than a coughing.
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1214.9 | | PBA::DALEY | | Fri Mar 25 1988 16:01 | 10 |
| Cats can get allergies too which make them wheeze.
And allergies come and go, can be treated or sometimes don't
even need to be treated, as whatever causes the allergy goes away
as quickly as it appears. If she acts like she does
only part of the day - rather than all day - then she will
most likely be fine maybe with some medications.
You know how kids are - they do these things to make their
moms worry.
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1214.10 | perfumes ? | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | | Fri Mar 25 1988 16:05 | 9 |
| RE:9
The only place this breathing problem has happened to Tisha is in
my bedroom ! It very well could be my perfumes (dresser full of
them)! Interesting, I will mention it to the vet. I am feeling
better with that thought in mind. I had poor puss dead and buried
in my head.
Thanks
Eileen
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1214.11 | Allergies | NAC::LACOUR | | Fri Mar 25 1988 16:34 | 9 |
| Yes! Cats can get allergies. Barney is 6 and has had allergies
for most of his life - drippy/teary eyes with lots of puss, wheezing,
and snoring. The puss in his eyes got so bad that yesterday the
vet operated on them and removed all the infected areas. Now his
eyes are clear and beautiful. Don't worry about Tisha. If it is
an allergy, it's treatable just as in humans.
Mary
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1214.12 | comments | THE780::WILDE | Being clever is tiring.. | Fri Mar 25 1988 16:53 | 15 |
| Well, the vet will have suggestions as to the breathing....about the children,
however, I have one comment.
People often insist upon petting a cat when she/he DOES NOT WANT TO BE
PETTED...when that happens, the cat bites. They also bite adults, but
adults are quick to note that means the cat wants to be left alone...
children are not so quick to realize this. Even if the child is gentle,
it still doesn't mean the cat wants to be bothered right then. A bite
is a normal way to say "leave me alone", and probably will continue to
happen....this behavior can even happen when the cat is on a lap, if
the cat wants the lap, but not the pat. Noone said they weren't contrary
creatures...
If the cat feels slightly bad (as with allergies or something) this
behavior is likely to be more pronounced.
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1214.13 | keep us in touch | CHEFS::TUDORK | | Sat Mar 26 1988 10:06 | 13 |
| Don't panic - cats sense moods very quickly and this will make the
journey to the vets more of an ordeal than it should be.
If it is asthma I believe that humans grow out of it, cats may be
the same.
It is now open season for furballs, so it could just be that, or
the allergy mentioned in previous notes, it seems likely since she
only does it in one place.
Whatever the reason, you're doing the right thing taking her to
the vets, will be thinking of you on Monday, let us know how she
is.
|
1214.14 | furballs | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | | Mon Mar 28 1988 12:28 | 17 |
| Had an exciting trip to the vet Sat. The vet took a blood test
for Feline Asthma, but she thinks it is furballs, she gave me medicine
to mix with her food twice a week. I am feeling a lot better about
it. Vet said Tisha had a real apple face, is that good ?
As for the biting of my grandchildren, the best solution is to confine
the cat to my bedroom while the children are visiting, I love the
cat but, I do not appreciate her using my grandchildren as a teething
wring. I want the children to grow up loving animals (all animals),
to much of this biting will turn them against cats. The children
are young (the oldest is 6) and easy to scare, I don't want them
afraid of cats, and I don't want them to think anything is off limits
in their grandmothers house. I think Tisha would just a soon stay
in my room when the tribe arrives anyway.
Thank you all for your help
Eileen
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1214.15 | Wheezy Siamese are common! | SWAT::COCHRANE | Send lawyers, guns and money. | Mon Mar 28 1988 13:24 | 29 |
| Niniane wheezes once in a while and so does Charm. I mentioned
this to my vet, and he said that some cats, and especially Siamese,
are suseptible to allergies and that the wheezing probably meant
she was allergic to something (since I keep them in the basement,
we concurred on concrete dust. It evens makes my asthma act up.
We'll be painting the floor and walls in the Spring to keep the
dust down). Niniane and Charm are both Siamese. They don't wheeze
badly enough to be on medication, but once in a while as they are
snoozing on my lap, I can hear them.
As far as the biting, Siamese can be fiercely loyal, one-person
cats who are very tempermental. My first Siamese, Lucky, bless
her soul was a one-person cat who was not above taking a chunk out
of your hand when she was finished with your attentions. We loved
her dearly, but we all bore her scars! My two ladies now seem to
be the exception rather than the rule - two affectionate, sociable,
non-biting Siamese who seem to be wonderfully patient with children.
All I hear from my guests is, "Are you sure these are Siamese?"
Guess I'm just lucky!
Mary-Michael
P.S. "Apple-headed" or an apple shaped face is a current purebred
trait in a Siamese. The former standard was wedge-shaped
or triangular head. I have a apple-headed, round-eyed Siamese
and a wedge-headed, slant-eyed Siamese. One looks perpetually
surprised, the other perpetually confused! ;-) But I love
them both!
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1214.16 | Some things SHOULD be off limits | CIVIC::WINBERG | | Mon Mar 28 1988 16:27 | 8 |
| Biting is a way of *teaching* little ones to be cautious around
cats . . . a lesson well worth the learning. Little ones, tho',
are sometimes slow learners, so should probably be separated.
Little ones too, should learn that SOME things ARE off limits at
grandmother's house . . . or ANYone's house . . . especially things
that could hurt them. Grandmothers and cats (also dogs, and other
animals) are teachers, like it or not.
|
1214.17 | The wedge is "IN" | EDUC8::TRACHMAN | | Mon Mar 28 1988 17:00 | 3 |
| Gee I thought that the wedge was current and that the apple head
was the face of past. I sure see a bunch of real sharp wedges
at the shows these days.
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1214.18 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Mon Mar 28 1988 17:03 | 5 |
| Re: siamese and kids
Little Khalife from next door, who is half Siamese
(meeeeeeeoooooowwwwwww) is great with their little girl.
|
1214.19 | SLANTED EYES | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | | Mon Mar 28 1988 17:14 | 6 |
| RE: .15
Tisha is appleheaded but slant eyed.
re: 16
Thanks for your advice, but I think I will continue to keep children
and Tisha apart.
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1214.20 | Glad to hear.. | CHEFS::TUDORK | | Wed Mar 30 1988 05:25 | 11 |
| So glad the vet thinks that it is furballs. Anything oily helps
smooth them down, I give my two pilchards in oil (I've stopped giving
them pilchards in tomato sauce because Tarot loves the tomato sauce
so much that he eats that and leaves the pilchards).
Let us know the results of the asthma test.
Re the biting. Some cats just don't like small children, they behave
differently from the adults that they are used to. Keeping them
apart seems to be the best option for now, there's plenty of time
for them to get the cat bug like the rest of us!
|
1214.21 | Allergic to down | CLUSTA::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Thu Mar 31 1988 10:22 | 11 |
| A couple things...first, allergies...my Honey is allergic to down,
and since my bed is covered with a down comforter, I try to keep
him away from it. If he curls up on it, he will usually end up
wheezing and snoring away (drives me nuts!). Second, as gentle
and affectionate as he is, he is terrified of small children and
will hiss at the sight of one.
Isn't it amazing how the sound of an impending hairball attack (within
1000 meters) can wake you from a sound sleep???
Mary
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1214.22 | See if you can get kitty to sleep on his stomache | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Thu Mar 31 1988 19:03 | 12 |
| > Isn't it amazing how the sound of an impending hairball attack (within
> 1000 meters) can wake you from a sound sleep???
It sure does it to me, and I once slept through a fire alarm going
off right outside my college dorm room.
Argus sometimes makes funny noises while he sleeps but it has never
been anything to really worry about. He has a very loud snore and
refuses to roll over. He is also the affectionate type (gets real
close so that he can snore in my ear).
Deb
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1214.23 | all better | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | | Fri Apr 01 1988 17:11 | 5 |
| Asthma test came out negative. Tisha has not been weezing since
I started giving her medication.
Thank you all
|