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Conference misery::feline_v1

Title:Meower Power is Valuing Differences
Notice:FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY
Moderator:MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO
Created:Sun Feb 09 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jan 11 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5089
Total number of notes:60366

4098.0. "Large lump on side???" by AIMHI::UPTON () Mon Oct 22 1990 11:41

    	Let me give a brief history:
    
    	Ashley - 7 month old spayed female Simaese
    
    	She's always on my lap so get gets petted alot.  While watching
    	TV last night I noticed a large lump by her side (near the shoulder
    	but not on the shoulder).  She is an indoor only cat and has no
    	scratches or abcess on the lump.  It feels like a large fatty
    	lump.  I can actually put my fingers all around it and almost
    	under it with no discomfort to her.  She has an appt first thing
    	tomorrow morning with the Vet.
    
    	Question - Could this just be a fatty tumor?  Do cats get fatty
    	tumors?
    
    	It does not appear to bother her in anyway.  If it is a fatty
    	tumor (and I pray it is) must it be removed?
    
    	Why would it grow so fast - I'm sure she didn't have it a few
    	days ago, like I said above - she's always on my lap and I'm
    	always petting her, so I think I would have felt it before.
    
    	You can actually see a lump when she is walking by - that's how
    	big it is (about the side of a small super ball).
    
    	Final - Could it be Cancer?
    
    	thanks,
    
    	-Dee
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
4098.1May be nothing to worry aboutSUBURB::ODONNELLJMon Oct 22 1990 12:346
    We got very worried when we found a lump on our first cat at around the
    same age. The vet checked it and said it was something to do with her
    muscle growing (I think) and that it was nothing to worry about. She
    did enter it into Kayleigh's record to be monitored and it just seemed
    to go away after a while.
    It sounds like a good idea for the vet to check your cat over, though.
4098.2WILLEE::MERRITTMon Oct 22 1990 12:4811
    Only your vet will know for sure,,...  we had a kitty who had a
    lump on the back side of her neck...near the shoulder.  The vet
    did remove it and did a biopsy to determine if it was cancerous.
    
    We lucked out...it was just a fatty tumor and not cancerous.  And
    Mitsy is now 13 years old and is a real healthy kitty.
    
    Good luck...and I'm glad your bringing her to the vets.  Please
    keep us posted.
    
    Sandy
4098.3ALLVAX::LUBYDTN 287-3204Mon Oct 22 1990 12:599
	We had a cat with several lumps under the skin.  The vet suggested
	that the lumps were from a B-B gun but I can't remember a time
	that the cat was cut (I may have been in college at the time though).

	Anyhow, the lumps were never removed since the vet felt that
	they were nothing dangerous and he lived till age 14.

	Karen
4098.4WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JOset home/cat_max=infinityMon Oct 22 1990 13:435
    Any chance that your cat has been recently vaccinated?  Sometimes
    vaccines can cause lumps under the skin, but they go away by
    themselves.
    
    Jo
4098.5AIMHI::UPTONMon Oct 22 1990 14:0720
    
    	Re: #4
    
    	Yes she did have a shot when she was in being spayed just about
    	a month ago.  If I'm not mistaken she was given a shot in about
    	that area.  I sure that is what it is.  She's such a love and
    	what a talker.  She has got to be the smartest cat I have ever
    	owned, I swear she know everything I say to her and has an
    	answer for everything.
    
    	She was suppose to be a blue-point Siamese, but she is totally
    	white on her body with a chocolate face and ears and a light
    	grayish/brown tail with stripes.  Sound like any cat you've
    	ever seen?  
    
    	Thanks for all replies and I'll let you know what the Vet says
    	tomorrow.
    
    	-Dee
    
4098.6JJLIET::JUDYMoney? What's that?Mon Oct 22 1990 14:1913
    
    	Not to panic you but we're going through something similar
    	with Brandi right now.  It appeared Saturday night and I
    	dropped her off at the vet this morning.  Turns out she
    	had an ear hematoma (cyst-like).  Had to be anesthetised
    	and operated on.....sigh.  She doesn't get sick/injured that
    	often but when she does she goes for the gusto..
    	I don't know if this is it or not.  It sounds like there could
    	be many possibilities.  Hopefully yours will turn out better
    	than mine
    
    	JJ (who is glad now that she and Cary didn't buy the entertainment
    		center the other night cuz now we gotta pay the vet!)
4098.7SANDY::FRASERMonsters remonstrated...Mon Oct 22 1990 14:596
	Stripey tail?  Sounds like a lynx-point, possibly chocolate,
	right, Judy? :^}

	Sandy, with Smudge, Tas, Jenn, C.C. and Beau (choc.lynx)

4098.8JJLIET::JUDYMoney? What's that?Mon Oct 22 1990 15:295
    
    
    	Yup!  Our seal (or choc.) lynx point is light beige (almost white) 
    	with tabby markings on the forehead and face, dark paws, ears and
    	dark striped tail.
4098.9It's only moneyWJOUSM::GASKELLMon Oct 22 1990 16:177
    YUP!  We went spare when we found our (recently vacinated) cats ALL had
    lumps on their necks.  Panic call to the vet.  No problem, he said,
    it's normal.  
    
    If you had not noticed it before, it's probably not cancer--even the
    fast growing kind takes time.
    
4098.10lumpsMASADA::PIERCEMon Oct 22 1990 16:329
    
    My lynx point has a lump on her side also..its muscles..it happend when 
    she was young..my vet told me to have her fixed,,,due to the lump may
    casue trouble if/when she gave birth..so we did...to my sorrow..she is
    so beautiful I want  more just like her.
    
    Good luck w/ yours
    
    Louisa, Chammie, Carmle, Nephra
4098.11TENAYA::KOLLINGKaren/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca.Mon Oct 22 1990 19:3711
    Re: .10
    
    That lump on the side/trouble giving birth sounds more like a hernia.
    
    I wish vets would warn people about vaccination lumps.  How many
    notes have been posted in here by people scared out of their wits
    about these....
    
    A hematoma (sp?) is just a big blood clot, if I recollect correctly.
    
    
4098.12CRUISE::NDCPutiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313Tue Oct 23 1990 09:207
    Bob had a lump too - but on the back of his rear leg.  I never thought
    about a vaccination because I'd never heard of a vet giving a 
    vaccination in that area.  Bob is an x-feral and we had dropped him
    off for "the works" at Boston cat hospital so I wasn't there when they
    vaccinated him to see where it was done.  Sure got me worried.
    
    Nancy DC
4098.13JJLIET::JUDYMoney? What's that?Tue Oct 23 1990 09:4515
    
    
    	re: Karen...
    
    	If I understood the vet asst. correctly yesterday, she had a cyst
    	or something on/in her ear.  With it being uncomfortable she shook
    	her head alot and this is what caused the hematoma.  I just wish
    	we had noticed it earlier but she's such a loner that she wasn't
    	'around' us much.  The poor thing was sooo groggy last night
    	when I brought her home.  She has what they call a pancake bandage
    	on her ear.  It's like two pieces of special cardboard, one on
    	each side of her ear and they're sewn on!!  She's so miserable.
    
    	JJ
    
4098.14She's OKAIMHI::UPTONTue Oct 23 1990 10:5323
    
    
    	Well we had out visit to the Vet this morning and he feels like a
    	few of you said - that it is most likely a vaccination lump.  If I
    	remember correctly she had a little blood on her white fur in that
    	area (shoulder).  She definitely hated being there, but she did
    	behave like a lady!
    
    	I still a question about her color -
    
    	Her Mom was a Sealpoint Siamese and I think they said her Dad was
    	a Lynx?  She is almost white (very, very like beige) on all her
    	body, but her ears, legs and tail are kinda chocolate, like a 
    	Sealpoint, except her tail is stripped.  Her face is almost a
    	circle of brown with a very dark nose.  Her mask does not extend
    	as far to her cheeks as my other Sealpoint cat.  Does she sound
    	like any specific type cat to you?  I'm just curious - of course
    	we think she's beautiful
    
    	Again - thank you all for your wise and comforting words - You're
    	a heck of a group!!!
    
    	-Dee,  Ashley & May Ling 
4098.15WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JOset home/cat_max=infinityTue Oct 23 1990 14:2913
    Dee - if Dad was a lynx, then she is too.  Tabby markings are dominant
    to solid points.  The rings on her tail are a give away.  Also,
    look for the M on the forehead, and either ticking or stripes to
    come to her legs later on (she is young, right?).
    
    Nancy DC - rabies is an intramuscular shot that is given in the
    back leg.  Depending on the vet, it can be given in the outer thigh
    or from the back of the leg.  If Bob got a rabies shot, he may have
    gotten one of these lumps.  Rabies is usually the culprit in these
    lumps since other vaccines are given sub-q and usually dissipate
    quickly under the skin.
    
    Jo
4098.16WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JOset home/cat_max=infinityTue Oct 23 1990 14:316
    Okay, let me modify that last statement about rabies.  Until recently
    it was an intramuscular shot.  Recently, several vaccines companies
    have come out with sub-q rabies shots.  Ask your vet which type
    he uses.  Mine is still using the IM form.
    
    Jo
4098.17Hey, Biff, is that the missing part??TPMARY::TAMIRACMS design while-u-waitTue Oct 23 1990 21:117
    My vet is also using IM for rabies.  Biff gets huge bumps from shots,
    and since he's skin and bones, they stick out when he walks.  Sure had
    me worried!  It's a good thing they go away; he'd look like a pin
    cushion otherwise!!
    
    Mary
    
4098.18for rabies: IM yes, sub-Q no.MAZE::FUSCIDEC has it (on backorder) NOW!Tue Oct 23 1990 23:098
re: rabies shots

We've heard tell that subcutaneous rabies vaccinations have been shown to 
be not very effective.  If your cat has been vaccinated this way, I would 
suggest that it be re-vaccinated intra-muscularly.  (We put this in our
kitten contract). 

Ray
4098.19CRUISE::NDCPutiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313Wed Oct 24 1990 08:345
    re: .16, .18   Thanks Jo.  I recently took two of the kittens in
    for rabies and the shots were given sub-q.  I'll have to ask the
    vet about the effectiveness of these shots.   Any one else have
    any info on this?
    
4098.20WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JOset home/cat_max=infinityWed Oct 24 1990 12:287
    The one time that I had a serious problem with a lump was when one
    of my cats was vaccinated with a sub-q rabies.  That was a show
    cat, and the lump was there for the whole season.  I ended up pulling
    the cat, since every judge made a big show of checking out the lump,
    and it made me uncomfortable.
    
    Jo
4098.21Seems like quite a while ago...???CUPMK::TRACHMANEmacX Exotics * 264-8298Wed Oct 24 1990 13:429
    re: 19
    
    yes, quite a while back, I thought that the sub-q vaccines had
    been recalled for being ineffective.  Cats that had been 
    vaccinated sub-q, were called back by their vets to repeat
    the vaccine I-M.  Haven't heard whether or not the sub-q
    version had improved or not.
    
    E.T.