T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1523.1 | | SPGOPS::MCNAMARA | | Wed Jul 06 1988 13:25 | 5 |
| One of my Siamese has an allergy which affects one eye. We have
had it checked several times to see if it was the result of too
vigorous play or some type of scratch. It seems most frequent in
the Spring. There is an ointment I can use but Pyewacket hates
it so - I usually let it alone. Only lasts about a day.
|
1523.2 | Eye Gunk | USMRW2::KSHERMAN | Star Fleet Reserve | Wed Jul 06 1988 16:00 | 7 |
| Same at our house. One of our cats has a chronic allergy which results
in a runny eye. Yucky to look at, but it doesn't seem to do the
guy any harm. Heck, I have allergies, too, so I know how he feels.
KBS
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1523.3 | Mom, where's the saline?? | CLUSTA::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Wed Jul 06 1988 16:24 | 11 |
| If this came on suddenly, it might not be an allergy. You vet will
most likely check for an ulcer, infection, and the like. In the
meantime, you can keep the eye clean with any sterile eye preparation
(available at the drug store...ask for an eye wash or irrigating
solution). You also can keep it clean by wiping it with saline
solution, like you'd use for contact lenses. That's what my little
Chauncey's opthamologist uses.
Keep us posted on your vet visit tomorrow. Good luck!!
Mary (and Chauncey with perpetual eye gunk)
|
1523.4 | We call it GUNGUS at our house | WITNES::MACONE | | Thu Jul 07 1988 09:19 | 9 |
| Portia also gets eye gungus. She has it 95% of the time. If it
gets real bad, I'll wipe it off. Otherwise, I ignore it and let
her take care of it. She's had it since the day we got her so I
don't worry about it. But you're wise to go to the vet since it
came on suddenly. Hopefully it will jsut be a minor irritation
and nothing to worry about :-)
-Nancy
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1523.5 | an allergic cat. | IAMOK::HTAYLOR | Me and my lil' pots o' purrs. | Thu Jul 07 1988 09:44 | 15 |
| Of course, Micki the persian gets all kinds of eye gunk. From what
I understand, that's something that all persians get.
Tuesday, I brought Snooks to the Vet because she seemed to be having
trouble opening her eyes all the way and there was some gook coming
out of them. The vet said that she thinks that it is an allergy
and she gave me an ointment that I have to put in her eyes. If
it is not cleared up by next week, I have got to bring her back
and she is gong to test as see if it is a bacterial infection.
If it is, then she is going to have to go on antibiotics.
ONLY ME!
Holly
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1523.6 | DROPS | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | Eileen | Fri Jul 08 1988 10:05 | 4 |
| The vet was not sure what was wrong with Tisha's eye. He said it
was inflamed (I could have saved myself $30.00 on that comment),
he did give me drops and said if it is not cleared up by Monday
to call him. He also gave me antibiotics in case it was infected.
|
1523.7 | Chances are.... | CLUSTA::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Fri Jul 08 1988 11:51 | 7 |
| Were the drops called Durafilm (Genoticin??)?? They work great
for Chauncey. I always keep some around for those times when he
gets 'kaka face'. If they don't work, I'd suggest a call to VONE
in Lincoln, MA, and a conversation with the kitty opthamologists
there. Keep us posted!
Mary
|
1523.8 | Kitty Pink Eye | NAC::LACOUR | | Mon Jul 11 1988 09:48 | 14 |
| Barney has goopy eyes too. They got SO bad that this March he had
to have surgery on them because the eye membrane had gotten so inflamed
that it became very bothersome and would also sometimes bleed.
It turns out that he has something with a long name, but basically
it's chronic conjunctivitis (or a real bad case of pink eye). He's
had this most of his life (he's now 6) and I'm treating him with
a cortisone ointment twice (I do once) a day. It really helps.
The funny thing is that in humans pink eye is contagious; however,
neither of my other boys have contacted this. Since I've never
asked the vet on this, I really don't know if it's contagious from
one cat to another or not. My guess is that it isn't.
Mary,
Barney, Ben and Gonezo
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1523.9 | Not contagious | CLUSTA::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Mon Jul 11 1988 11:13 | 6 |
| Nope, it's not contagious. Honey has primary responsibility for
keeping Chauncey's eyes clean (and they both seem to really enjoy
it), and has never shown any signs of eye problems. Chauncey really
fights those eye drops, but, he looks so pretty with a clean face...
Mary
|
1523.10 | Pink Eye is contagious for cats. | HPSCAD::KNEWTON | This Space For Rent | Fri Jul 22 1988 17:21 | 14 |
| Tiggers got conjunctivitis in both eyes because of a congestion virus
that kittens get alot. The conjunctivis did spread to Snuggles
my 2 year old cat. I'm currently trying to get rid of it by using
the ointment that the vet gave me for Tiggers.
I did see another note in here about Dejavu losing his voice. Tiggers
lost his voice because of this virus. Our vet just told us to treat
the conjunctivis and that the virus would go away on its own and
if it didn't in about a week to bring him back in. Sure enough,
the congestion virus went away all by itself.
I just hope Tiggers doesn't get the conjunctivis back.
Kathy
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1523.11 | BACK AGAIN | CLEVER::SULLIVAN | Eileen | Fri Jul 29 1988 10:02 | 6 |
| Got up this morning and noticed Tisha's eye is looking irrated again.
I kept her on the oral anti's till gone, and gave her the eye drops
(not an easy task) till they were gone. I thought it had cleared
but it seems to be back. I hate to sound CHEAP but the last visit
to the Vet cost me $64.00, and he had could not figure out what
it was. Advise please.
|
1523.12 | | INDEBT::TAUBENFELD | | Fri Jul 29 1988 11:00 | 11 |
| I don't know if you're in Mass, but if you are, then it's probably
the weather. Mielikki has a reoccuring eye problem, it was fine
for a month or two, just yesterday it came back. I have ointment
from the doctor for it, the usual treatment is to just start using
the ointment again until it goes away, no vet visit needed.
I've spent money on 3 vets and though the diagnosis is always
different, the treatment is the same.
Sharon, Mass, USA
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1523.13 | | INDEBT::TAUBENFELD | | Fri Jul 29 1988 11:03 | 7 |
|
Oh, forgot to mention, whenever I run out of ointment, I've always
been able to go back to the vet and pick some more up, no appointment
necessary. This will only cost you the price of the medicine, which
tends to be a lot cheaper than the vet visit.
|
1523.14 | Don't mess with eye problems, take him in | JULIET::CORDESBRO_JO | | Wed Aug 17 1988 13:19 | 40 |
| After spending months and months (not to mention big bucks) taking
Kalliste to the vet and medicating on the trial and error basis,
I finally decided to break down and find a kitty opthamologist.
It took 5 minutes and $40.00 to find out what the problem was (as
opposed to 12 vet visits, 7 different kinds of medication and over
$250.00 in vet bills). Kalliste had Chlamydia. It is also known
as Pneumonitis. He was treated topically with Terramycin ointment
three times a day for 3 weeks and the problem was gone.
It is the opinion of the opthamologist that Chlamydia is the culprit
behind most feline eye problems, but that most vets aren't
trained in the latest methods of detection. It is one of the most
under-diagnosed of cat illnesses (in his opinion).
Chlamydia is extremely contagious and affected cats should be isolated
until 7 days after last visible symptoms disappear. Also, treatment
requires religious application of the medication for a minimum of
3 weeks.
There are vaccines to help prevent Chlamydia. Eclipse IV by Solvay
is one and Norden Labs also makes one. Although the vaccine is
not guaranteed to prevent Chlamydia, it will lessen the severity
of each recurrence.
The symptoms of Chlamydia include watery eyes, red or swollen
conjunctival tissue, elevated third eyelids and the most indicative
symptom, visible white follicles on the underside of the third eyelid
(the vet will have to check this for you).
As a side note, if your cat has a pus-like discharge, it probably
doesn't have Chlamydia unless it also has a secondary infection.
Pus indicates a bacterial problem and Chlamydia is not a bacterial
infection, it is viral.
Sorry to have gone on and on, but after the diagnosis of Chlamydia
in my future stud cat, I made a point to find out as much as I could
about "the enemy". ;^)
Jo
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1523.15 | When in doubt - find out - ask the Vet. | EDUC8::TRACHMAN | E.T.'s ZhivagoCats......DTN: 264-8298 | Wed Aug 17 1988 13:56 | 12 |
| Thank you for your input, Jo. Please don't apologize for sharing
important information! I found it very helpful - I have a little
girl with one watery eye. It just waters a little once in a while.
She is not sick nor does she display any other symptoms of anything.
It seems to occur when I change the litter or when it is windy outside.
My guess & the vet's is that it's dust (inside & outside). None
of the other 14 have it (whatever IT is) - just the one.
I agree - when in doubt, take them in! Usually it's worth the $$$
in the end - both for your piece mind and the cat's health.
E.T.
|
1523.16 | No title, thank you | JULIET::CORDESBRO_JO | | Thu Aug 18 1988 21:56 | 5 |
| Monroe also suffers from chronic allergic conjunctivitis. It is
much worse in the spring and summer (kitty hay fever). I have started
using a 99% dust free litter and it seems that it helps.
Jo
|