T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2761.1 | some ideas | GENIE::KRINER | | Fri Aug 11 1989 12:57 | 16 |
| Has your vet ever treated Figaro for hormonal problems? It seems that
altered cats sometimes get their hormones out of balance. Our female
cat Rainbow (RIP) had this problem, she sprayed, very much like a male
cat would do. After checking & treating her for a urinary infection,
our vet put her on "doggie birth control" pills (that's what we called
them, and I'm pretty sure that's what they actually are). After about
a week & a half, she stopped spraying (at least in the house).
Sometimes, our cats wet where they're not supposed to, because they're
not happy with the condition of the litter box. You might try changing
it more frequently, or adding another box. Disinfect the boxes periodically
too, preferably with a product from your vet, stuff like lysol isn't good
for the cats.
Hope it helps,
Paul (Dad to 20 or 21 cats, I'm never sure)
|
2761.2 | Your response appreciated | FRICK::TRAVERS | | Fri Aug 11 1989 16:49 | 14 |
| We visited the vet today and he has determined that she does have
an infection. She pee'd all over the examining table and he used
a syringe to get a sample to examine with a microscope. So, she's
back on antibiotics again. We decided not to treat it as a behavioral
problem - yet. He did not mention hormone treatments.
BTW, this is not "spraying" - she's leaving a bladder full of urine
on my furniture!
Thanks for your help.
^_^
(>.<)
) ( Jeannie
|
2761.3 | And .... | BSS::DAHLGREN | | Fri Aug 11 1989 18:39 | 3 |
| See also note 2578.0 for a dietary source of bladder problems.
-- Ed
|
2761.4 | | AWASH::NDC | Nancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it all | Sat Aug 12 1989 09:11 | 13 |
| Jeannie,
This may be hard, but I suggest you confine her to certain areas
of the house for a while. You can let her out when you will be
there to supervise her 100% of the time. If its a urinary infection
its not her fault, but the end effect is the same.
Perhaps you could buy two of those "child gates" and stack them
one on top of the other to keep her either in certain rooms or just
out of the livingroom. I priced them at Zayre's for about $16 each.
WHatever you end up paying for them, its got to be cheaper than
a new couch!
Good luck
Nancy DC
|
2761.5 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Sat Aug 12 1989 12:17 | 12 |
| It sounds like she is having some chronic problem with urinary
tract infections. I agree that it is not a behavioral problem;
she can't help what she's doing. I'd talk to the vet to see
why she keeps getting reinfected like this. Could it be that she
has an infection that's resistent to the antibiotic used, and so it
keeps flaring up? The vet needs to do some work here. By the way,
when I was last in at the dry cleaners, the counter man told me they
had just rescued a sofa that had been substantially peed on by a cat for
some time. I believe part of what they had done was saturate it with
one of the enzyme cleaners; these are much better than regular
cleaners. Have you tried those? One is Nature's Miracle.
|
2761.6 | I don't know how they did this! | ROLL::ANDERSON | | Mon Aug 14 1989 09:32 | 22 |
|
I have a somewhat different problem, but same kind.
My cat lives with my mother until I graduate college; my mother is
about to marry and move in with her new husband, who fortunately adores
my cat as well as hers in spite of allergies. I have one more year of
school.
The problem is that my mother's fiance is very neat and my mother's
worried about the litter box odor. She says only my cat (an elderly
female) uses it, because hers goes outdoors (a neutered male)--I
believed this until we got an enclosed litter box. Last time I cleaned
it, the _walls_ had urine on them, which explained why it smelled worse
than usual. But I don't understand how either of the cats could have
done this--there's not really enough space for a cat to lift his (her?)
leg. Sometimes we find urine stains other places in the cellar (same
room as the box), but I don't think it's because the litter box is
dirty because there's often fresher urine in the litter.
So what should I do? Do I have to camp out in the cellar to correct
any possible mistakes? Or just install a closed-circuit camera in the
litter box? :-)
|
2761.7 | more than you wanted to know about spraying ;^) | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | | Mon Aug 14 1989 14:13 | 26 |
| re:.6
Is your female spayed?
A neutered male that goes outdoors is more likely to start spraying
than a spayed female who stays indoors all the time. The male will
still have to mark his territory so that the other outdoor cats
will know to stay out of his area. He does this by spraying. Once
a cat learns the spraying behavior, it is hard to break them of
it. A cat doesn't lift his leg to spray. A cat sprays standing
up on all four feet. They will left their tail high, and sometimes
you will see it wiggle a bit. The urine comes straight out. A
cat will almost always spray against something, the wall, a bush,
the sofa, cabinets, etc. If you look around your mom's house, at
about a foot and a half off the floor, that is where you will find
evidence of spraying, if someone is doing it.
A spraying cat can be given hormones to help curb the desire to
spray. These have to be prescribed by the vet.
I think it is more likely that the male is spraying than your female.
That is, unless the female is not spayed, and is coming into season.
Females in season will sometimes spray to mark territory, and to
attract a mate.
Jo
|
2761.8 | This calls for private investigation :^} | ROLL::ANDERSON | | Mon Aug 14 1989 15:19 | 18 |
|
The female is spayed, but due to her age I was wondering if there
could be possible kidney problems--but I can't seem to find any puddle
stains on the floor or newspapers in the cellar (I didn't look higher),
just a general odor. The male was neutered sort of late, but I don't
recall him spraying then. Would he spray in the house, too, if he does
in the cellar? We would have noticed that. We may have to start spying
on the critters, they're usually all alone in the cellar. I'll have a
look around the cellar again at a cat's eye level. I was starting to
wonder if my cat needed a check-up due to her kidneys or bladder;
actually maybe both of the cats are the problem.
I didn't know females sprayed for any reason--we've always had
neutered pets. Thanks for the suggestion, but I'm starting to feel
silly spying on our cats' bathroom habits. If they'd just tell us!
Thanks again,
Lisa (and Snoopy and Tipper)
|
2761.9 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Aug 14 1989 18:19 | 8 |
| Sometimes it's hard to find the places they've gone outside
the box. Try an enzyme deodorizer like Nature's Miracle (I
feel like I recommend this every day) to remove the smell;
it will smell worse when the enzyme is working, then the
smell disappears. Since your baby is elderly, a checking, mentioning
tthis possible problem specifically, would probably be a good idea an
anyway.
|
2761.10 | Where to buy... | FRICK::TRAVERS | | Wed Aug 16 1989 13:27 | 8 |
| Re .5
Where can I buy "Nature's Miracle"? I work in Marlboro, live in
Franklin.
^_^
(>.<)
) ( Jeannie
|
2761.11 | Natures Miracle? you can say that again | WOODRO::IVES | | Wed Aug 16 1989 14:19 | 10 |
| I just bought two quarts of it from a supply house in Calif. I paid
$4.75 per quart and even with the shipping charges ($3.50) it came
out a lot cheaper than what I was quoted in the stores around here.
I will get all the particulars tonight and enter a note her tomorrow
with the address.
IT WORKED WONDERFUL.... just like they said it would.
Barbara
|
2761.12 | | FRAGLE::PELUSO | | Wed Aug 16 1989 14:25 | 3 |
| I just saw in Noah's Ark Pet store in shrewsbury on Rt 9 in White
City plaza. It was like $9.00 for a huge bottle.
|