T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2908.1 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Tue Oct 03 1989 18:08 | 18 |
| Carlajeanne,
I am sorry that the kids aren't feeling better. It is very important
that Verne and Shirl get their medications, since those medications
will prevent further complications. When they declaw, they often
have to cut through bone, and it is very easy for infection to set
in. Be very careful to get that medicine into them, if you need
help, maybe a friend or neighbor can help you. If you put it in
their food, and they don't eat, then they are not getting it.
Are they using their litter boxes on their own or do you have to
put them in it? How are their litter habits doing since the operation?
They are only 4 days out of surgery so they are probably still feeling
truly rotten. Hopefully, as time goes by, and they start feeling
better, they will become more mobile.
Jo
|
2908.2 | | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Letting Go: The Ultimate Adventure | Tue Oct 03 1989 19:12 | 41 |
| I got Coelura declawed three months ago. You'd never notice the
difference, except there are no gouges left in your skin when she
swats you with her front paws. :-)
I must have an exceptional vet. Others have told me all kinds of
horror stories about bandages and kitty casts and infections and such,
but when I picked Coelura up the next day, there were no bandages and
barely any indication that anything was done. Just some yellow
antibiotics stain on her white paws and a bit of redness (sores) where
the claws once were.
When I got her home, she was still a little groggy from the vet
treatment, but started running around a playing like nothing had ever
happened. Once in a while she would jump down from a favorite perch
and stop for a second, laying her ears back as if wincing in pain, but
then she'd continue on, obviously okay. She's *never* limped from the
declaw. By day three you'd never know she'd been declawed (except that
she kept falling off of things that she used to be able to stick to!).
And I wasn't given any medication to give her. The only special
instruction I was given was to put shredded newspaper in her box for
the next 3 to 5 days instead of kitty litter. She hated the newspaper
and was back in kitty litter in three days. I examined her carefully
and didn't notice any irritation to her paws.
She has adjusted to the change very well, IMHO. She uses her front
paws like hands to grasp things and protects herself with her back
claws and her teeth when she feels threatened. And she's mostly an
indoor kitty.
How old are your kitties? If they are older (non-kittens) that may
have a lot to do with the types of complications they're having.
In deciding to get Coelura declawed, I did a lot of research on the
procedure and found that different vets make as much difference as the
feline's age and circumstances.
I don't regret doing it, but I'm biased by a happy ending. Please
keep us posted on your kids' progress.
Carol
|
2908.3 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Oct 03 1989 19:16 | 4 |
| I wonder if you should take them to a different vet? Do you
have confidence that this one didn't mess up the operation?
Please let us know how things are going.
|
2908.4 | | BLKWDO::PARKS | | Tue Oct 03 1989 19:25 | 4 |
| I had the same experience as in .2.
Tsunami was being her normal terrorizing self by the third day.
I would also consider talking to another vet.
Becky
|
2908.5 | | WFOV11::GONCALVES | | Tue Oct 03 1989 19:59 | 9 |
| I've had the same experience at .2 and .4. I didn't give them any
medication at all. The only difference was the shredded newspaper
in the litterbox.
They were back to their old selves in about 4-5 days. Please
talk to another vet.
Shelly, Selina, & Mijo
|
2908.6 | CATS WITHOUT!! | MAIL::ASHBY | | Tue Oct 03 1989 21:57 | 4 |
| I HAVE HAD BOTH OF MY CATS DONE. FRONTS ONLY. THEY HAD NO PROBLEMS
AND WERE JUMPING AROUND AS NORMAL IN A FEW DAYS. WE ALSO HAVE A
FRIEND WITH TWO FOUR YEAR OLD CATS, SHE JUST HAD THEM DONE ON ALL
FOURS, BOTH CATS ARE FINE, THEY PLAY JUST THE SAME.
|
2908.7 | still, they just lay there, no running or jumpin' | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Wed Oct 04 1989 07:56 | 37 |
| i couldn't get into this file at all yesterday; what a drag!
day five of rest; still no progress with shirl. verne seemes to be
fine, but of course he is eating very very well. (in fact, i bet he
puts on a pound or two from eating and not exercising.) but anyways..
my parents have taken their dogs to this vet for about 10 years or so.
i know the family (dr. fitzgerald of fitchburg/lunenburg) well and
don't think that they messed up the operation. i am beginning to think
however that the bandage on shirl's left paw could be why she won't put
it down. yesterday when i came home i put her on my chest (one of her
favorite spots) and she put both feet down and i could tell that she
had pressure on them. the bandage looks like it is making her paw stay
completely straight; thus making it hard for her to bend it the
opposite way. they really seem to be alert but yes, i did have to put
her in the litterbox. verne? well he was up on the window when i came
home so i assume if he could get up there that he is doing fine.
i will be calling the vet today and i'm sure that he will tell me to
bring them down and i'm hoping to get the bandages taken off and their
little paws examined. if i do not feel satisfied by what he says i
will take them down the road to the fallon clinic.
the kitties were 2 years old in april. april 24th is my calculation..
we had such a nice birthday party for them last year on that date
( :) at the thought of it) and they were spayed and neutered when they
were 8 months old. everything went fine with that operation. i picked
them up from the same vet the same day; they were groggy when they got
home but in 48 hours they were fine.
can't wait to call the doctor. thanks for all your support. i will
keep you posted.
carlajeanne, verne and shirl
|
2908.8 | Glued paws | GENRAL::BALDRIDGE | Fall has fell | Wed Oct 04 1989 11:25 | 13 |
| We had our new kitten, Cassandra, declawed about 6 weeks ago and like
.2, she was up and about the next afternoon. How can such a small cat
make so much noise when thundering thru the house? One small note;
our vet uses a cyano-acrylate glue (sorta like Crazy Glue) to cover
the wounds. It wears off in about 3-5 days and doesn't require any
bandages. We used newspaper in the litter box for one day, but
Peaches and Doobie objected, so back to regular litter. Checked
Cassandra's (The Flea) paws a couple of times a day to make sure the
litter wasn't causing a problem, but the CA glue does a good sealing
job.
Chuck
|
2908.9 | My story | SQUEKE::WARD | Just pay me in CHOCOLATE | Wed Oct 04 1989 11:56 | 20 |
| Randy had Becky and Velcro done when they were broke. The vet used
the glue .8 talked about and kept them for about 3 or 4 days. When
Becky came home (she was first), everything was fine. We had to
have two litter boxes one with litter and one with paper and kept
Becky locked in a bedroom with the paper one. Trouble and Velcro
let us know in no uncertain terms that paper was not bathroom material.
When Velcro came home we put him in the downstairs bathroom with
the paper and he tried to dig his way out which started some bleading.
I called the vet and they said as long as it had stopped not to
worry about it. I moved Trouble to the room with the litter but
two days later she had figured out how to open the door, so I gave
up. I still have a box of litter and a box of paper for a few more
days, in case he really is using the paper at least to urinate.
The biggest problem I had was nobody would do solids in the paper. They
used the bathtub (at least it is easy to clean). I've already told
Randy NEVER AGAIN. I think it was more trumatic for me than for
the kids.
Bernice
Mother_of_Trouble_Becky_&_Velcro
|
2908.10 | | AIMVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Wed Oct 04 1989 13:45 | 23 |
|
My two cats were declawed 1-1/2 years ago. I left each cat
at the vet from Wednesday morning till Thursday night. I don't
recall any medication for the cats but do remember the paper
in the litter box. Both came home without bandages - it was
2 days later. T.K. was fine immediately. Only problem he had
was when he jumped on top of the refrigerator then decided he
didn't want to jump back down.
Bandit was a wimp. He refused to walk unless absolutely
necessary so I carried him everywhere for the weekend. Then,
for about 6 months after that he walked as if his feet hurt
him. The limp gradually ceased though and it was explained
to me that his feet didn't really hurt.. they were just ultra
sensitive. I forgot to mention - Bandit had to go in twice
for declawing since they missed a claw BETWEEN his toes the
first time. That is common with double pawed cats.
I would give them till the end of the week to see how their
feet feel but DO bring them in earlier if there is a sign of
an infection.
KAren
|
2908.11 | to be continued... 4:00 appointment! | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Wed Oct 04 1989 13:57 | 17 |
| o.k. this is the scoop.....
called norman the vet (does anyone else know of the fitzgerald clinic
on the lunenburg/fitchburg line in mass?)
he didn't seem really concerned and i figured that it probably was
because he didn't want to give me any conclusions as to what could be
wrong until he actually saw the paw. BUT, to make a long story short..
i'm bringing them both in today after work. i figure verne will get
the bandages taken off completely and shirl will have to get the sore
paw rebandaged. i hope i have alot of newspaper in the house! :)
thanks again guys ... i'll keep you posted.
carlajeanne
|
2908.12 | A little levity | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Letting Go: The Ultimate Adventure | Wed Oct 04 1989 15:02 | 17 |
| Sounds like things will work out okay, Carlajean!
Karen Luby just reminded me a an anecdote about a friend of mine whose
cat had to be put in a kitty cast because of an impacted claw in the
declaw procedure. Boots would limp around in the cast and get *lots*
of sympathy. He was still limping a bit when the cast was removed and
I guess he got used to all the attention because one day he was running
around the apartment just as fine as could be until he noticed "Mama"
standing by the doorway, watching. He stopped for a second, then
*limped* over to her, mewing for attention!
:-)
Keep us posted!
Carol
|
2908.13 | .12 reminds me | GENRAL::BALDRIDGE | Fall has fell | Wed Oct 04 1989 16:50 | 13 |
| Re: .12 This reply reminded me of a recent incident with Cassandra
(The Flea). Having not had kittens for many years, I had sorta
forgotten the "kitty shuffle" and stepped back from the kitchen sink
and stepped on The Flea's right paw (not very hard). She raised her
paw to show me it hurt and naturally I picked her up and made a big
fuss with apologies etc. In a few minutes it was all over with and she
was racing around the house, but now if we catch her doing something
she shouldn't be doing and yell(speak firmly) she stops and holds up
her right paw to show that it got "stepped on". Quite a little
actress!
Chuck
|
2908.14 | No Regrets | DELNI::J_LEMMON | | Wed Oct 04 1989 17:47 | 9 |
|
I had both my babies declawed when they were about six months old.
My vet kept them for about 3 days (boy, did I miss them) and when
I brought them home, much to my surprise, they ran around and beat
each other up as if nothing happened. :-)
Joanne
Puffin & Buttons
|
2908.15 | sounds too bad to me - see another vet? | THE780::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Wed Oct 04 1989 19:43 | 10 |
| This sounds really wierd....Hannah was kept over for 1 day after de-clawing
and came home sprightly and totally unaware (as far as the humans in her
life could see) that she had been declawed. She walked, ran, jumped, etc.
at will. I used shredded paper for 1 week as prescribed, but no drugs
were required...I've had not ill effects since..
If your cats don't improve pronto, I'd see another vet. This sounds
much worse than my experience indicates it should.
Good Luck!
|
2908.16 | bandages were giving them trouble! | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Thu Oct 05 1989 09:38 | 50 |
| yippee! it was the bandages! stupid me, they are fine and i'm happy
as a cow. i took them over and wow, did they have a line at 4:30....
kinda made me wonder why all these people would be there if he wasnt' a
good doctor. but he is, and when he took the bandages off and i saw
the red bandages i almost lost my lunch right there in the office but
he told me that that was the color of the bandages ... red. i told him
he was full of (*&^ and he just smiled and said everyone says that and
then showed me the rolls. he was right. but anyways... shirl was fine
when he cut them off and i couldn't believe my eyes when she took two
full steps on both feet and calmly walked into the cage. verne on the
other hand was alittle less than happy when we tried to cut the
bandages off. he moaned that deep moan that all kitties do when they
are 'really' mad and his eyes were back as far as they could go. and
when he got his off he yowled and just layed there; too afraid i belive
to move. i had to put him back in the cage myself.
no charge again.. that was another nice thing and no medication was
given. i was told though to do the paper in the box (which i have and
so far verne has been looking at the tub but nothing so far) and
continue with the antibiotics for another couple of days.
when we got home they licked their paws constantly but walked on them
fine and by seven their feet looked pretty good. no blood or anything.
shirl slept under my chin and purred contently the whole night. i was
upset that verne took to the fireplace corner (and i was cold from the
brick too) but when i took him upstairs all he did was purr and try and
grab my bathrobe tie again. this morning shirly was jumping from table
to table too and walking on the edges of my draws debating about
whether or not to climb into my socks and go to asleep.
so the story ended happily. i know that i'm not completely out of the
water because they could get infected but i don't think they will with
the medicine and the shredded litter stuff.
thanks again for all your support. you got me through the days when i
was so mad that i wasn't with them and wanted to quit my job and go
home to comfort them.
also, i'm happy that this note was started. all replies seem to be
positive which is something considering all the negative responses one
gets about declawing. seems like most of us have had no problem and
hopefully the next person who gets their kittie(s) declawed will read
this and feel better bout it.
take care,
carlajeanne and a happy vern and shirl
:)
|
2908.17 | | CRUISE::NDC | Nancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it all | Thu Oct 05 1989 11:11 | 5 |
| CarlaJeanne - Once you've made the decision and had the operation
done we all just want to support you, no matter our personal feelings
about declawing. I'm so glad to hear that Verne & Shirly are better.
Nancy DC
|
2908.18 | | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Letting Go: The Ultimate Adventure | Thu Oct 05 1989 15:35 | 6 |
| Glad to hear that the kids are alright!
:-)
Carol
|
2908.19 | declawed, back to nature? | OASS::BURDEN_D | No! Your *other* right! | Fri Feb 02 1990 15:22 | 10 |
| Has anyone had an experience letting a declawed (fronts only) cat
outside? When we got Erm she was going to be an indoor cat since
we lived in the city. We have recently moved to a nice calm, rural
area north of Atlanta and feel it would be nice to let the cats out.
Our other cat, Misty, used to be let out back when I was living at my
parents, but has been inside for 3 years now.
Are we asking for trouble by letting Erm roam around outdoors?
Dave
|
2908.20 | my 2 cents worth... | MAMIE::IVES | | Fri Feb 02 1990 16:35 | 24 |
| Here we go down the rat hole again.
You will probably get hundreds of differing opinions on this but
here goes....
Mocha was a stray, we wanted to make him an indoor cat, had him
declawed and he gets so nasty if he is kept in all the time he is
unbearable. We let him out. I am very familiar with our surroundings
and figured if something unexpected came up he would just have to
do the best he can. That's 2 years now.
He is a big cat (17 1/2 pound) so weight does help when someone
else thinks they are going to be king of the hill, and he climbs
trees, catches birds, chipmunks and all those things I don't want
him to do.
I suggest before you let your kitty out keep and eye on things in
your neighborhood and see what's what. The when you are out in the
yard let him out with you and see what happens.
I do worry when I can't see Mocha, and am always glad to see him
come running.
Barbara
|
2908.21 | One cats experience | PFSVAX::PETH | My kids are horses | Mon Feb 05 1990 10:12 | 9 |
| Someone dumped a cat at my barn almost three years ago. It was 6 months
before she let us touch her. It turned out she is declawed on the
front, is a fine hunter and hates to be inside. If she feels treatened
she bites instead of clawing. I am sure that it depends on the cat
whether you could let yours out or not. We sit back 800 feet from a
road with a 25 MPH speed limit, and none of the cats go near the road.
If we were any closer to the street I wouldn't let them out at all.
Sandy
|
2908.22 | not a good idea - but one solution is.. | FORTSC::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Mon Feb 05 1990 16:05 | 22 |
| If you are near a rural area, the disadvantage to letting a declawed cat out
is the fact that the cat cannot protect him/herself against a predator...
and they are out there. The quieter an area you live in, the more likely
you are to have maurading skunks, coyotes, dog packs, etc. around your area.
A cat with all hardware intact is at a disadvantage with these....a cat
with no front claws is guarenteed to be dinner. Although they can climb,
they cannot climb fast enough to save themselves and by the time they get
close enough to a hungry predator to bite it, they are caught.
As your cat is already declawed, I would strongly suggest you don't let
him/her outside at all. any trips outdoors will only encourage the desire
and it isn't safe. If you really want them to get outside,
then invest in a giant breeders cage in which you can set up sitting
platforms at different levels and put the cats outside in the cage when
you are home to watch over them. It's a nice way to spend some relaxing
time....sitting and reading a book beside the cage while your cats romp
in their cage. There are models of cages that connect to one another
through "tunnels" and you can set up a "gradually increasing in size" play
area for the cats as you invest in more pieces. One thing to remember,
any time your cat is restrained outside you must be careful not to leave
it in the hot sun too long - they can get overwarm.
|
2908.23 | I don't | MCIS1::SULLIVAN | Eileen | Tue Feb 06 1990 10:21 | 2 |
| My daughter's boss let his declawed cat out and it was killed by
a dog, her boss is a vet (should have known better.
|
2908.24 | keeping them in | OASS::BURDEN_D | No! Your *other* right! | Tue Feb 06 1990 13:03 | 8 |
| We've been thinking about this for a while and it looks like we'll keep
both cats inside after all. First, Misty, the old one, is pretty deaf
and Erm is declawed. But we've also had zero flea problems with them
kept inside all the time. Letting them in and out will most likely
bring fleas and other pests into the house.
Thanks for the information,
Dave
|
2908.25 | | CRUISE::NDC | DTN: 297-2313 | Thu Feb 08 1990 08:58 | 9 |
| Having had to cope with 10 cats and fleas this year - a battle that
I'm not sure we've won permanently yet - I can only reinforce your
decision to keep the cats inside.
You could consider leash training Erm. We've had success with several
of our cats, but like the cage idea, NEVER NEVER leave a leashed cat
unattended. Aside from attacks from dogs etc, they can climb trees
and hang themselves.
Nancy DC
|
2908.26 | HUH?? | DECXPS::LCOBURN | | Thu Feb 08 1990 12:29 | 11 |
| er...okay, this may sound like a silly question to all of you who
have so much cat *expertise*, but the last note here prompts me
to ask...declawed cats can climb trees?!?! How??! I have two cats
at home, but I grew up on a cow/pig/chicken/horses farm that was
loaded with cats, but declawing them/keeping them indoors all the
time was just not done so I'm not familiar with cats kept like that.
The two I have now are do-whatever-the-heck-they-feel-like-doing
cats, and I'm not considering declawing or *indoorizing* them, but
I AM curious how a cat with no front claws could climb a tree??!!
Forgive me if I sound ignorant here...:-)...
|
2908.27 | run and JUUUMMMPPP!? | OASS::BURDEN_D | No! Your *other* right! | Thu Feb 08 1990 13:11 | 9 |
| My guess would be that they probably push off with the rear claws more
than pulling with the fronts. Doesn't really matter around our new
house, all the big trees have no branches until you get up around 20
feet off the ground.
Personally I've never seen a declawed cat try to climb a tree so I
can't say for sure.
Dave
|
2908.28 | | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | | Thu Feb 08 1990 13:20 | 4 |
| Oliver is not declawed (it's illegal here), but I have noticed that
whenever he climbs up or down a tree, he 'cuddles' the trunk with
his front legs. Perhaps that's how a declawed cat manages.
They're cats, after all, and cats will find a way round ANYTHING!!!
|
2908.29 | | WFOV11::APODACA | Killed by pirates is good! | Thu Feb 08 1990 16:15 | 12 |
| Cats mostly use their hind legs for climbing (tho I won't deny the
front claws must come in handy). Since my declawed female could
scoot up and down a tree just as fast, if not faster, than the other
cats, and in the same style, I imagine the climbing process is often
akin to say, a logger going up a pole with those spiked boots.
In going down, the cat either backs down, turns around and jumps
or just shoots straight down and hops off (no mid-trunk squirrel
stops).
---kim
|
2908.30 | Not totally declawed | WELKIN::STRONACH | | Fri Feb 09 1990 09:09 | 8 |
| Years ago, I declawed Midnight - front paws only -- the vet left "thumb nails"
and that was what I've seen him use when he's climbed a tree. If I knew then
what I know now, I would never declawed him. And yes, he uses his teeth
to his advantageous, when necessary.
/Marian - mother of 5 (and still looking for a blue-eyed, all white cat!)
|