T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
5062.1 | | BEAUTY::TAYLOR | I just wanna hanky panky .... | Thu Nov 14 1991 13:13 | 10 |
| Chris
You may want to have her checked. It sounds like a flea allergy. I
had that problem when I had seasea a while ago. Actually found blood
in the bathroom.
She may have some fleas and is having an allergic reaction to them.
Holly
|
5062.2 | | WILLEE::MERRITT | | Thu Nov 14 1991 14:00 | 10 |
| I agree that it possibly could be flea alergies. We are currently
treating my new stray who had many scabs on him when he joined
my family. We did visit the vet who suggested we treat the
house and also use a Vet Kem flea powder on him once a week.
I can honestly say we haven't seen any scabs for two weeks.
BTW...if the flea's weren't causing the problem the next step
would have been to look at food alergies.
Sandy
|
5062.3 | | CLT::KOBAL::CJOHNSON | Eat, drink and see Jerry! | Thu Nov 14 1991 14:28 | 16 |
|
At first, we thought it was fleas. We have flea bombed the apartment
and took the bed apart and sprayed the mattress (we are getting eaten
alive by *something* too). We've done this on 3 separate occasions.
When we took Callie in I thought for sure she had fleas. Callie is
mostly a white cat (70%) and the vet ran a flea comb through her
and looked at her skin and said that he didn't see any fleas on her.
The vet was kind of stumped and thought that maybe she's allergic
to her food.
hmm..I'd also love to know what is biting me and husband. This
has been going on since May..I thought they were flea bites. They
look like mosquito bites and they itch like crazy..Don't know if
we'll ever solve this mystery.
-chris
|
5062.4 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Nov 14 1991 14:34 | 6 |
| Sounds like fleas to me. Amazing how a little flea can raise such an
itchy red reaction. I've forgotten the home remedy? Is it witch
hazel? Above all, don't scratch, as that makes it worse. Be sure to
immediately dispose of the vacuum cleaner bag after you vacuum, as they
can live it there and reinfest.
|
5062.5 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Thu Nov 14 1991 14:48 | 15 |
| Ditto on the fleas. You don't have to see them on the cat to have them
in the house. My vet found flea dirt on Nikki and my house is clean as
a whistle! I do plan to take action now while the eggs are probably
still dormant.
Herbie, my Himalayan, had the scabs you described before coming to live
with me. His breeder swore her house was flea free (they treated it
several times) but each time some scabs cleared up, new ones erupted.
When I took him, he has only one scab which is since gone and hasn't
had another once yet (knock wood!).
Fighting fleas is an ongoing process. You can't just do it once and
then stop. The cycle is continuous.
|
5062.6 | PENNYROYAL | WMOIS::RIVETTS_P | | Thu Nov 14 1991 14:49 | 3 |
|
PENNYROYAL
|
5062.7 | fleas, but possibly another cause | NOVA::SIMON | | Thu Nov 14 1991 17:11 | 4 |
| One more vote for flea allergies as a strong probability, but the scabs
may also be due to dermatitis or another related cause. The treatment
usually is similar - prednisone, azium, or another steroid - except in
the case of fleas, and I'm not sure in those cases.
|
5062.9 | Mites???? | MRCSSE::JACOBSON | | Fri Nov 15 1991 09:28 | 9 |
| Chris,
When I was 8 years old my mother and I both got mites from our cat
Charcoal. Charcoal also had scabs on him. I can remember laying on the
bad and scratching and scratching. The doctor gave us some pills and
cream. I think the cat ran away. I am not sure, but I believe it is
difficult to see mites with just the human eye.
Does anyone else have any experience with mites all over a cat?
|
5062.10 | Try this... | USWRSL::BISHOPWAL_SC | Oh!/\;;/\Belfry Bats!/\;;/\ | Sat Nov 16 1991 18:34 | 18 |
|
Chris...
If it is indeed fleas (and since you're being attacked, too, it might
be...) try using Zodiac flea spray.
I had a -really- bad infestation one time when I moved into an
apartment at a new complex. Lots of construction, lots of fleas. The
Zodiac spray got rid fo the infestation really quickly and then with a
couple of other treatments (2 weeks later and 2 months later) they
never came back.
Zodiac also has a pyrethrin dip that works fantastically...and it's
safe to use on older kittens, too. It works really well and keeps the
fleas off. My kitten doesn't even scratch any more and I found her as
a stray.
Good luck, hope the owies go away!
|
5062.11 | I have had the same problem | MRKTNG::ROSSI | Give me another word for Thesaurus.. | Tue Nov 19 1991 13:27 | 23 |
| I had this same type of problem about a year ago with one of my females.
It was very frustrating because I never found one flea on any of my
cats nor had I ever seen any in the house. But yet these scabs kept
appearing on her back I would remove most of them with baths and they
would scrape off. But then I started getting bites as well(at least
that's what I thought they were) never once had I ever seen a flea. I
scoped Maxine under a light and nothing fluoresced but to make sure I
had the scabbs cultured at the vets and everything came out negative.
My vet was unable to determine the cause as well. She quessed that it
was probable fleas but there were no signs at all.
Then all of a sudden they just disapeared without a trace and have never
returned since.. I never medicated her or gave her a flea bath of
bomed the house I still wonder exactly what it was. But shes
absolutely fine now.
Valerie
|
5062.12 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Nov 19 1991 13:38 | 2 |
| Fleas tend to die down in colder weather.
|