T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4432.1 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:19 | 20 |
| I have had cats with upper respiratory viruses (kitty flu; sounds like
this is what Buster and Charlie have) that lingered for around 3 weeks.
What you are dealing with is a virus which the immune system must fight
on it's own. The antibiotics won't clear it up, but will help prevent
any secondary infections.
In the past, I have had very good luck with Cefatabs or Cefadrops. The
strongest dose of antibiotcs would be Keflex, I believe. Cefa is a
derivitive of this. You didn't mention what your vet put the kittens
on after the amoxi. In our house, when amoxi and clavamox don't work,
I ask for cefatabs. Most of the time, I will request cefatabs because
we've had such good luck with them.
Worst case scenario here is that your kittens' colds are a symptom of a
much greater problem. If things don't improve soon, you might ask your
vet to conduct a more thorough exam and maybe take some xrays of the
chest and lungs.
--Roberta
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4432.2 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:24 | 7 |
| Oh, and PLEASE DON'T administer any medication on your own, without
approval from your vet.
Usually the immune system will build up a resistance to an antibiotic
and then it is a matter of switching off until you find something that
works.
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4432.3 | WARNING | PROSE::GOGOLIN | A sunset girl in a midnight town | Thu Mar 07 1991 11:38 | 7 |
| DO NOT give your kitties Tylenol! Tylenol (tablets) is lethal to cats;
I assume Tylenol Cold Medicine would have the same effect. You should not
give a cat ANY people medicine unless your vet has told you it's ok.
Hope the little guys get well soon!
Linda
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4432.4 | | SHALOT::BROWN | | Thu Mar 07 1991 11:50 | 7 |
| Re: .1 - The antibiotic I received after the Amoxicillin was Clavamox.
I just couldn't remember the name of it.
So, Cefatabs, Cefadrops, and Keflex are all antibiotics and stronger
than the Clavamox? If so, maybe I should ask the vet for that.
Re: .2 and .3 - Thanks for the warnings.
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4432.5 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:11 | 3 |
| Yes, the cefa is stronger than the clavamox. Keflex is even stronger
than both. My kitties never responded to the clavamox very well.
|
4432.6 | please, save BIG GUNS for true need | RHODES::GREENE | Catmax = Catmax + 1 | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:16 | 30 |
| re: previous
I was *really* intrigued about the use of a decongestant (I am NOT
talking here about an antihistamine, btw). I have been wondering
for a long time why we can't help our little kits breathe while
they are fighting the URI virus. I mean, *I* take a decongestant
to help temporarily relieve cold symptoms...
As for the Heavy Hitter Antibiotics for URI,
<set mini-flame on>
Please use restraint on ALL antibiotics for Upper Respiratory
Infection. As was previously mentioned, usually these are caused
by a VIRUS, and antibiotics are NOT effective against viruses.
However, an antibiotic CAN help fight a secondary bacterial infection,
or even help to prevent one taking hold. So, if it is used for
prevention, which is a frequent situation, use something like
amoxicillin. *SAVE THE HEAVY HITTERS FOR WHEN THEY ARE REALLY
NEEDED.* Using them routinely can lead to a <heavy_hitter>resistant
strain. Of course, using amoxi can lead to an amoxi-resistant
strain, but if that happens, then you can pull out the big guns,
the heavy hitters. But if you end up with a HH-resistant strain,
good luck! None of us wants to face that. And worse, these strains,
like any other, can be contagious... leading to tricky_to_treat
illness for other animals as well as the original one(s).
<flame off, sorry>
Pennie
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4432.7 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:28 | 12 |
| Pennie, I agree with you and should have mentioned it. My vet was
hesitant to write me a script for antibiotics just to have on hand
because she felt that it could lead to resistance and then when we
really needed it it wouldn't work. She doesn't believe in overusing
any type of antibiotic.
I thought since .0's kitties have been sick for so long they might need
a stronger course of meds.
BTW, When TK had a URI two years ago the vet was going to give him a
shot of Benadryl to help decongest his lungs
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4432.8 | Kill the cooties.....(germs).. | BOOVX1::MANDILE | | Thu Mar 07 1991 13:20 | 12 |
| Maybe a thorough cleaning/disinfecting of the house
& areas where the kittens eat, use the litterbox, sleep,
etc. might help. They could just be passing it
back & forth, only to pick up the germs again and the
whole thing starts all over.
DO NOT USE Lysol, though....it is poisonous to cats.
A bleach & water solution, (1 part bleach to a gallon of
H2O) or something your vet recommends should be fine.
Lynne
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4432.9 | | SHALOT::BROWN | | Thu Mar 07 1991 13:45 | 7 |
| Re: .8 - We thoroughly clean the house every week, so hopefully there
aren't too many germs they are picking back up, except from each other.
I have heard several people say that Lysol is poisonous to cats. Are
you referring to the liquid cleaner or the spray? I don't use Lysol
liquid cleaner, but I do use the spray for food odors, litterbox odors,
etc.
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4432.10 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Thu Mar 07 1991 13:48 | 2 |
| BOTH! Lysol contains phenol which is lethal to cats.
|
4432.11 | you may be re-infecting your cats | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Mar 07 1991 13:56 | 35 |
| > I have heard several people say that Lysol is poisonous to cats. Are
> you referring to the liquid cleaner or the spray? I don't use Lysol
> liquid cleaner, but I do use the spray for food odors, litterbox odors,
> etc.
not healthy for the cats. Use Mr. Clean to clean around the cats' areas
and then rinse well and dry.
Also, do not give meds to both cats with the same medicine dropper, and do
NOT use the medicine dropper in the bottle at all. In this way, you can
prevent the cat from catching the disease from his pal, and you can keep the
medicine "clean" by not using the dropper that comes with the bottle. Ask
the vet for enough extra dosage administration tools to take care of each
cat. Wash each tool completely in hot soapy water after EVERY dose of meds,
and then rinse and dry thoroughly.
If you have one cat that is looking more ill than the other, isolate that
cat from the other until both cats are healthy.
Finally, have the cats checked again by the vet - if they are not running
a fever, they may need you to change their kitty litter brand because they
are allergic, or they may be allergic to other things. However, the flu
that is going around can be real hard to beat - I know of one family with
4 cats - one of their older cats had it for a month.
I also caution overuse of the amoxy - it won't kill a virus, but it can
kill the bacteria that help cats digest food in their intestines. This
can further weaken a cat by preventing good nutrition. Vets give this
stuff to us most of the time, I think, to make the humans feel better...
they have no effect on the cat unles the cat has an INFECTION. Viruses,
flues - colds - etc. are NOT INFECTIONS. Treat the symptoms to make your
cat comfortable and keep enough food and water in the cat, even if you
have to get force feeders from the vet and force-feed baby food and use
eye droppers to administer water. The cat will beat the virus if you
keep it's strength up.
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4432.12 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Thu Mar 07 1991 14:13 | 12 |
| No one has mentioned this:
Buy some Nutrical and put a glob in the kitty's mouth. Nutrical is a
high palatable nutritional supplement... a Godsend for cats with URI.
When TK was sick, I mixed it with babyfood and water and fed it to him
with a syringe. Be careful with the syringe. Go slowly, or the cat
can aspirate on the food.
D. is right. Gotta keep their strength up. I always believe that if
you give up, so do the kitties. They rely on your strength to get
well.
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4432.13 | | SHALOT::BROWN | | Thu Mar 07 1991 16:19 | 9 |
| Since they are a couple of replies referring to the kittens getting
week, it made me realize that I didn't mention this before. My kittens
are far from being week. They eat like little pigs, play like crazy,
and otherwise feel fine. They just sneeze all the time, have watery
eyes, and at times get congested.
Thanks for the hints about washing the eye droppers after each dosage.
The vet did give me two separate bottles of Clovamox, but I haven't
been washing them off after each use.
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4432.14 | Could be the Lysol?? | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | | Thu Mar 07 1991 17:15 | 11 |
| Just wondering if it could be the Lysol that is causing a reaction???
Before I realized what the side effects of Lysol were I had sprayed it
around the house and that same evening Pippin became congested, sneezed
and coughed to the point where I thought she wouldn't be able to get
her breath. It triggered a sort of asthmatic reaction which required
medication and nose drops. The other two didn't react to it (thank
God) but she had one he** of a time. She's never had the problem again
as Lysol is banned from the house.
Giudi +3
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4432.15 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Thu Mar 07 1991 18:04 | 11 |
| The ingredient in Lysol that is toxic to cats is Phenol (forgive me if
this has been mentioned already, haven't had time to read the whole
string). Do not use any cleaner that contains Phenol as that will be
toxic too.
The cheapest, safest disinfectant that I know of is household bleach.
Dilute it 1/32 and use it to wash down surfaces, food and water bowls.
It will kill all the upper respiratory viruses, fungus, felv, FIP, and
most types of parasites and worms.
Jo
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4432.16 | New Medicine | SHALOT::BROWN | | Fri Mar 08 1991 11:40 | 18 |
| Yesterday after work I went by the vet's office and asked them about
getting either the Cepadrops or Keflex for the kittens or if I should
get more Clavamox and keep them on it for a longer period of time. The
vet said that they had Keflex but only in a tablet. Per my request,
they called the drugstore to see if they had it in a liquid form (as I
have had much more success with my kittens with the liquid). They did
have the liquid, which I purchased and started them on last night.
Much to my surprise, the Keflex (or the generic brand Cephalexin which
they sold me) is cheaper than the Clavamox. A 10 day supply for both
kittens was $10.00, compared to $18.00 for the Clavamox. They said
that the generic brand will do the same thing.
As I said, I started them on the new medication last night. I will
keep you up-to-date on how they do with this new medication. The only
thing about it is that you have to give it to them 3 times a day
instead of twice, and it smells horrible!
Debbie
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4432.17 | | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Sun Mar 10 1991 18:59 | 7 |
| I'm not going to repeat the warnings about phenol, but I'll mention
that a lot of folks use Lysol as an air fresher; if that is why you
are spraying the house with it, I'd like to suggest that you try one of
the Arm & Hammer aresol air-freshners. Their active ingrediant is
BAKING-SODA and they contain no pheonols.
Deb
|
4432.18 | | WILLEE::MERRITT | | Mon Mar 11 1991 09:54 | 9 |
| I started using this Citris spray which is 100% citris with no
added ingrediants. It smells like oranges and it takes care
of the Poop smell within minutes. Hopefully this is harmful
to me babies.
Believe it or not...I buy the spray at my hairdressers. It is
a little bit expensive...but does the trick.
Sandy
|
4432.19 | Sniff...Ahhhh!! | BOOVX1::MANDILE | | Mon Mar 11 1991 11:47 | 5 |
| The Arm & Hammer "Pet Fresh" spray......I love it!!!!
It has a scent that you can't describe as anything
other than "Fresh"...!
Lynne
|
4432.20 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313 | Tue Mar 12 1991 10:00 | 3 |
| I prefer the Ozium anti-bacterial spray. Its also expensive but
worth it, especially with kittens around.
|
4432.21 | Update/Question | SHALOT::BROWN | | Tue May 21 1991 12:35 | 30 |
| I have been meaning to get back in here and give you an update on my
kittens' colds. I have a new question for you, so it reminded me that
I never entered an update.
The generic equivalent of the Keflex never did much good, so the vet
put them back on the Clavamox for three weeks. I gave them the
Clavamox continuously for three weeks, and their sneezing, watery eyes,
etc. was gone. This was also about the time that the weather started
getting warmer around here (North Carolina). At the time, I thought
maybe it was just a coincidence, but now I am wondering if the colder
weather doesn't really have something to do with it.
About a month ago, we had a little cold spell and the kittens started
sneezing again and their eyes started watering. A had one bottle of
Clavamox left that I had gotten from the vets (still in powder form),
so I mixed it up and started them back on it. Well, within a few days
everything was fine, and the weather also warmed up again. Just this
past week, we have had another cold spell. The kittens haven't really
been sneezing that much, but their eyes are watering (or have a lot of
"cold" in them). Otherwise they seem fine.
Has anyone ever heard of the cold weather bothering kittens like this?
I was wondering if maybe their immune system just isn't fighting off
the colds well enough. This leads me to my next question - should I be
giving them some sort of vitamin supplements? Will their immune
systems be able to better fight off colds when they get older?
I would greatly appreciate any help you can give.
Debbie
|
4432.22 | | WILLEE::MERRITT | | Tue May 21 1991 13:05 | 11 |
| Debbie..
I just want to share that within the last couple of weeks the
shelter I work for has had a few problems with URI. The vet
said it is due to the constant changes in the weather. It's very hot
during the day (85)...and down to about (40) at night...the
cat's body just can't adjust. The shelter is damp too!!
Hope you can control this problem soon!!! Keep us posted.
Sandy
|
4432.23 | Where in NC?
| TPMARY::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Tue May 21 1991 13:05 | 10 |
| Well, up here in New Hampshire, we get a little cold weather, but my 6 cats
don't seem to react to it. Where in NC are you?? If you're inland, maybe
it's some type of allergy; same for all the pine pollen at the coast. Kittens
aren't as hearty as we like to think they are, but yours seem unusually
sneazy. I don't know what to tell you. If you're feeding them a good
quality kitten food, they shouldn't need extra vitamins. You might ask
the vet for a supplement for them; they've got some vitamins that come
in a tube, like toothpaste, that my guys just love.
Mary
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4432.24 | vaccine reactions maybe? | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Tue May 21 1991 13:52 | 11 |
| Have the kittens received their vaccinations yet? Lots of times the
modified live vaccines will cause kittens to get runny eyes and sneezes
a few days after vaccination. The reason I ask is that you describe
three bouts of colds in all the kittens, and I usually vaccinate my
kittens three times. Just thought there may be a connection there.
If you find that it is related to vaccines, try switching to killed
virus vaccines next time. I have had no colds or other reactions with
killed virus vaccines.
Jo
|
4432.25 | Don't think so | SHALOT::BROWN | | Tue May 21 1991 13:55 | 5 |
| Re: .24
The kittens have had all their vaccinations, but it has been a month or
so since they received their last one. I don't know about the rest of
them, but I do know that the rabies vaccination was killed.
|
4432.26 | could be your heater | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue May 21 1991 15:42 | 16 |
| > About a month ago, we had a little cold spell and the kittens started
> sneezing again and their eyes started watering. A had one bottle of
> Clavamox left that I had gotten from the vets (still in powder form),
> so I mixed it up and started them back on it. Well, within a few days
> everything was fine, and the weather also warmed up again. Just this
> past week, we have had another cold spell. The kittens haven't really
> been sneezing that much, but their eyes are watering (or have a lot of
> "cold" in them). Otherwise they seem fine.
it sounds as if they may be reacting to your heater....is it possible that
you haven't changed the filter recently? If not, then your heater chould
be harboring some nasty things that get blown into the environment -- you
might be more immune than the kittens.
have your heater serviced and the filter changed before you get any more
cold weather...it might do wonders.
|
4432.27 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue May 21 1991 17:00 | 2 |
| Do they have a place to stay out of drafts?
|
4432.28 | | SHALOT::BROWN | | Tue May 21 1991 18:09 | 5 |
| Re: .26 - We haven't had the heater on in a few months as it hasn't
gotten quite that cold when it cools down. We have had the air
conditioner on, but we do keep the filter changed regularly.
Re: .27 - Yes, they have free run of the entire house.
|