T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2986.1 | Some things to look for... | MISFIT::ABRAMS | Night of 1,000 cats | Thu Oct 26 1989 12:09 | 8 |
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Can you tell exactly where Cinamon is bleeding? Try to locate if it's gums,
or sores inside or around the mouth. If it is, see a vet. It it's outside
mouth, like a skin wound, just treat it to stop infections and watch it
closely. Our cats get outside sores from bug bites, playing, etc.
Are you feeding him the same food he usually eats? If it's harder food,
it could be irritating his mouth.
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2986.2 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Thu Oct 26 1989 12:46 | 6 |
| Have you checked inside his mouth to see if any teeth are missing?
Jesse lost his upper canines first, and his lips kind of sunk in,
giving him a funny expression. I don't remember any blood when
he lost his teeth though.
Jo
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2986.3 | | ALLVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Thu Oct 26 1989 13:39 | 16 |
|
I called the vet and they suggested that he may just need to
have his teeth cleaned. They told me about some type of
polishing where the cat would have to be anethesized and I
told them of the cats age so we can't knock him out. The
only other thing they can do is show me how to clean his
teeth myself. Rather than paying $30+ to have this demonstrated
to me, I'd prefer to find out how to do it on my own. If I
don't see an improvement, then I'll take him to a vet.
This doesn't seem to be paining him at all. The blood is
DEFINATELY coming from inside his mouth. I'll have to take
a closer look when I get home to see if I can pinpoint the
bleeding.
Karen
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2986.4 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Oct 26 1989 14:25 | 4 |
| If this has been going on for months, I would say a vet's visit is in
order. Cinnamon is probably in pain or at least discomfort, and
maybe they could treat whatever is wrong and reduce his discomfort.
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2986.5 | Toothpaste for cats | GENRAL::BALDRIDGE | Fall has fell | Thu Oct 26 1989 16:34 | 13 |
| Our 14 yr old Peaches and 15 yr old Doobie have a lot of tartar build
up and due to age, the vet doesn't want to put them under for a
thorough cleaning, so we have a toothpaste (CMT brand, I think) which
is a dual enzyme formula that is applied with a piece of gauze.
Doobie is very mellow and suffers the indignity reasonable well.
Peaches is a bit flightier and struggles at first, but finally realizes
we are trying to help and then goes into his imitation of a "flatworm"
and puts up with the procedure. We do this about once a month and it
seems to be helping. Neither cat has had any bleeding from the gums
so I don't know if it would be applicable in your case.
Chuck
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2986.6 | To the vet..... | HEFTY::DOWSEYK | | Thu Oct 26 1989 17:34 | 9 |
| A few years ago my cat (aprox 16 years old) started to drool, stoped
grooming himself, and had trouble eating. I checked his mouth with
great care and saw nothing. When things kept getting worse I took
him to the vet. The vet found a tumor under his tongue.
If I ever see the same symptoms again, or the ones you are seeing I
would get to the vet as fast as I could.
Kirk
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2986.7 | Second Opinion...To the Vet... | BIMINI::SPINGLER | | Thu Oct 26 1989 18:12 | 21 |
|
Karen, please, take this cat to the vet as soon as you can. Bleeding
is always a serious situation in a older cat. Also it could become
a real health risk if the cat stops eating all together.
You don't want him to end up with anemia or worse over what could
turn out to be a simple problem.
But please let your vet do the diagnosis, that is what they are
trained for. Better to catch any problem in the early stages anyway,
and if follow up treatment is required at home, your vet is the best
qualified to show you how it is done.
Thirty dollars isn't so much money to spend on friend of such long
standing is it?
Feline Concerned,
Sue & Panther & Spot
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2986.8 | | CRUISE::NDC | W frnds like these,who nds halllucinatns | Fri Oct 27 1989 08:19 | 7 |
| re: anesthesia - We had a dog that used to develop a benign tumor
on the inside of her mouth. Because of her age the vet couldn't
anesthetize her to remove the tumor. Instead he tranquilized her
and used local anesthesia. Perhaps your vet could use a tranquilizer
on Cinnamon and then do the cleaning.
Nancy DC
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2986.9 | please see the doc! | CSCOA3::MCFARLAND_D | just call me dunwoody di | Sun Nov 05 1989 21:09 | 16 |
|
we (stanley,stella & yourz truly) echo the sentimentz expressed in .7
please take the cat to the doc. you may end up feeling foolish later if
it turnz out to be something simple. but wouldn't you rather feel a
little foolish than what you might be feeling later if it turnz out to
be something serious?
please forgive me if i seem to be moralizing. it'z just that our furry
onez can't tell us what is wrong. they trust us to find out.
good luck...
diane (dr. feline)
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2986.10 | A tooth by any other name is just a tooth | ISLNDS::BROUGH | | Mon Nov 06 1989 08:57 | 17 |
| A different question on losing teeth. I was playing chase the
string around the living room when I decided that I had enough so
I let the female chew on the string by herself. I laid on the floor
and I let her crawl on my stomach and she started to chew on the
edge of my tee shirt. I wasn't really paying attention but when
I looked at the shirt, there was blood on it. I was panic stricken,
but I picked her up to see if she had caught a nail on something,
but she didn't but when I looked on the rug a tooth was there (the
large one on the bottom right of her mouth). She didn't appear
to be in any pain and she is currently eating okay, but what I'd
like to know (or at least be at ease with) is is it normal for them
to lose their "baby teeth" like us humans. She eats and plays with
all her toys, and she runs around and attacks her brother like nothing
was wrong. What does anyone think?
Paul (and Pixie and Dixie)
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2986.11 | Not to Worry | BIMINI::SPINGLER | | Mon Nov 06 1989 10:02 | 24 |
|
Hi Paul, yes it is normal for cats to lose their baby teeth, just
like us! When Panther and Spot were kittens, I found little teeth
all over the place.
Spot even went around for two days with one of her canine teeth
(baby variety) sticking out of her mouth at a 45 degree angle, she
wouldn't let me pull it. But believe me nothing gets in the way
of that cat and her food, she still ate! The tooth finally fell
out on it's own.
But any time an elderly cat has trouble with it's teeth or mouth
it could be serious, especially if they stop eating. So don't worry
about your little ones.
If the the origional noter is reading, please give us an update
on your cat, we are concerned.
Feline fine,
Sue & Panther & Spot
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2986.12 | Loose Tooth? | SHALOT::BROWN | | Tue May 21 1991 12:17 | 12 |
| This morning one of my 6 mo. old kittens started acting like it was
trying to get something out of its mouth. At first I thought he was
trying to cough up a furball, but then I saw him trying to put his foot
in his mouth like he had something in his mouth and was trying to get
it out. He would then move his jaws around and I could hear his teeth
making a grinding noise. I picked him up and tried to look in his
mouth (as much as he would let me), but I didn't see anything. He
wouldn't let me look long enough to see if there was a loose tooth.
Could it be that he has a baby tooth that is loose? I have found a
tooth on the bed before that one of the kittens lost, but I've never
seen them do this.
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2986.13 | | WILLEE::MERRITT | | Tue May 21 1991 12:53 | 11 |
| And my guess is that when you go home and if you
search hard enough...you will find another tooth.
My little kitty acted the same way when he lost his
baby teeth. He would take both paws and rub the sides
of his mouth....and I would hear grinding. Of course...
I called the Vet panicking because I thought something
was wrong with his mouth.
Sandy
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2986.14 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Tue May 21 1991 13:46 | 4 |
| A lot of the time the kittens will swallow the baby teeth and you will
never see them. So don't worry if you don't find the tooth.
Jo
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2986.15 | Thanks!! (and we didn't find the teeth, either!) | MCIS2::HUSSIAN | But my cats *ARE* my kids!! | Wed May 22 1991 09:45 | 7 |
| Tabitha was doing the same thing a few months ago. I thought she had a
piece of dry food stuck between her teeth or something! She only did it
a few times one day, so I figured it was out & all was well! I guess
that when Callie starts doing it in a few months, I'll REALLY know what
it is!!!
Bonnie
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