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Running Chick

Monday, March 8. 2010

The Fronts

Posted by Running Chick in Cats, Injury, Insanity
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Wow, has it really been since 17 Feb that I've updated? I have been neglectful of my blogging duties! Well, let's get on with it then. The Injury Front Yeah, my legs are effed up again and I'm pretty ticked off about it. There were starting to bother me about two (three?) weeks ago so I went back to Podiatrist to see if I needed an adjustment. He observed that my left leg was shorter than my right leg and added a 1/4" lift in my shoes. I had three (maybe four) really good, pain-free runs (It's been so long, I'd completely forgotten what that felt like), and then things slowly started to fall apart until everything hit the bottom last Saturday when I set off for a 7 miler and had to bail at 2.5 miles in disgust because my shins & knees were killing me. In hindsight, I should have bailed after the first mile, but I didn't. I'm stupid. Anyway, I've got shin pain and now knee pain and I've never had knee pain from running before. In fact, it's about the only thing on my legs that haven't given me problems. Hamstrings: check. Hips: check. Calves: check. Shins: check. Ankles: check. Knees: awesome! So, I'm taking this week off to do some moping cross-training and I'm going back to yell at discuss things with Mr. Podiatrist on Thursday. Last summer, he advised me that my problems were caused by over-pronation and that custom orthotics would resolve this issue and I'd be running big pain-free miles in no time. $500 custom orthotics will cure my lower leg issues, my ass! If anything, they seem like they've caused a good portion of the issues and I'm about THISCLOSE to going back to my original setup of over-the-counter cushioning insoles in my stability shoes. The Simon Front Poor little Simon has had a rough month: weight loss, appetite loss, vomiting, lethargy, drugs, drugs, drugs. He finally seems like he's leveling out and is (mostly) keeping food down and his appetite is much improved. I had to bring him back in last Friday so he could get his T4 (thyroid hormone) levels checked after being on Trapazole for the last month. He's been on & off the medicine so much in the last month, that I didn't hold out much hope for good news, but I was pleasantly surprised that his levels are back in the normal range. Woohoo, good news! He's still having bouts of vomiting in the middle of the night which I usually step in as I stumble to the bathroom in the morning (gross), but it's sporadic. And his appetite is okay. He's never had a big appetite to begin with, so as long as he's eating and not losing any weight, I'm happy. So, we continue with the two pills/day and that's that. Well, that's about it. Until next time!
 

Wednesday, February 17. 2010

Simon update

Posted by Running Chick in Cats
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A couple weeks ago, I mentioned my kitty Simon was having some issues. It's been two weeks since he was diagnosed with hyperthyroidism and put on the drug Tapazole. The first 10 days went great. I had success hiding the pill in tuna or a pill pocket (more on this later), and only ended up pilling him two or three times during those ten days.  I also started to notice his behavior changing.  He wasn’t hollering so much, nor was he as clingy.

Late last Friday, Simon started throwing up.  He was still throwing up on Sunday and hadn't eaten or drank anything since Saturday.  He was looking really bad. I tried to get him to eat something - anything - but he wouldn't even look at food.  He was just too nauseated.  All he would do is throw up. And he was so exhausted from throwing up all the time, he wouldn't even walk away after he barfed. He pretty much just stood there by it or sometimes in it and look really pitiful.

After cleaning up his barf for the I don't know what number time at 2:00AM, I started to wonder if it was time to start thinking about making "that" decision. Let me tell you, having to think about doing that is depressing and upsetting and panic inducing and all sorts of other emotions that I couldn't even begin to detail.

On Monday, he looked slightly perkier, so I decided to wait to call the vet.  But, he still was refusing food and water.

So, I called the Copper Country Vet Clinic and explained the situation.  I was fearing the worst, but Dr. Cole reassured me that things probably weren’t as bad as they seemed.  The first thing we needed to address was the nausea, then possible dehydration, and then getting some calories in him.

For the nausea, Simon was prescribed Metoclopramide, which I have to apply to his inner ear twice/day.  It comes in a syringe and I have to wear gloves when I apply it.

 
Then, to address his dehydration and caloric intake, Dr. Cole had me buy something that I never in a million years thought I’d be buying for myself.  Pedialyte and baby food.
 
 
I felt slightly embarrassed by purchase and had to resist the urge to explain it to the checkout lady at Shopko.  “It’s for my cat!!”  Yeah, like that would make it seem less weird.
 
Anyway, I got home ready to dispatch the drugs and baby food and saw this.
 
 
And then this, as I was opening a can of food for Spencer.
 
 
A perky, bright eyed, happy, HUNGRY Simon!
 
I gave him food, and he ate.  And ate, and ate.  And drank lots of water.  And it’s been four hours and everything is staying down.  What a relief!  I’m going to hold off on administering the medicine and the baby food/drink because I don’t think he needs it at this point.
 
One thing Dr. Cole did tell me was that this was pretty typical for a senior cat (I didn’t know that), so at least I have the tools to deal with it, if it happens again.
 

Thursday, February 4. 2010

Simon

Posted by Running Chick in Cats
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Say hello to Simon. 

He’s your average 15-year-old housecat – sleeps (a lot), eats, poops.  He’s slowing down in his old age, but every once in a while he manages to race around the house like his tail is on fire.

Recently, I’ve started to notice changes in Simon’s behavior.  They started out rather subtle.  He’s never been a very talkative kitty, but all of a sudden, he started vocalizing.  I thought it was cute.  I encouraged him.

Simon:  meow

Me:  meow

Simon:  meeyow!

Me:  meeyow!

Simon:  MEEYAAAAOWWW!

Me:  MEYYY…oh wtf I’m a crazy cat lady.

Anyway, a few months of that and I noticed that he was doing it all the time. Loudly. While staring at me.  Or staring at Josh.  Or staring at the wall.  Or staring at the ceiling.  Did he want food?  No.  Did he want water?  No.  Did he want to be picked up?  No.  Did he want to be played with? Petted? Brushed? No, no and no. 

Then he started pacing.  In the middle of the night.  Off the bed, down the hall to the bathroom.  Then downstairs.  Then, back upstairs & to the bathroom.  Then back to the bedroom and up on the bed.  Then sit there for two minutes and start all over again.  Did I mention this was in the middle of the night?

Then he got really, really clingy and anxious.  He followed me everywhere and if he couldn’t find me, he’d start with the loud meowing again.  If I was outside shoveling off the deck, he’d freak out.  If I went outside via the basement, I would hear him meowing from the other side of the door.  When I’d come inside, he’d stand at the top of the basement stairs and meow loudly at me.

When I started to notice he was losing weight, I decided that it was time to visit the vet.  I’d been reading up on elderly cats and figured it was senility.  Or maybe he was going deaf.  Or maybe both.

Two hours, two blood tests and $260 later, we have a diagnosis.  It’s not senility.  Or deafness.  It’s hyperthyroidism.  I’m not going to do it justice explaining it in technical terms, so you can refer to the information from the fine folks at Cornell University’s College of Veterinary Medicine for all that.  Basically what it means is that he’s got an overactive thyroid gland.  It’s fairly common in kitties of his age.  To determine whether or not a cat has hyperthyroidism, the blood is tested for an enzyme called thyroxine (T4).  Normal levels of T4 are between .8 and 4.  Simon’s level was somewhere above 7.  The clinic’s scale only went as high as 7, so that’s as accurate a reading as they could get.  But, the results were pretty clear.

So, the news is good and bad:

  • Bad:  Hyperthyroidism is incurable.
  • Good: It’s easily managed with drugs.
  • Bad: The drugs are in pill form.
  • Good:  The drugs are really small.
  • Bad: The dosage is twice per day.
  • Bad: Simon does not like taking pills.

 

The drug he was prescribed is called Tapazole (Methimazole). I gave him the first pill when we got home from the vet’s yesterday.  I was able to do it quickly and I’m pretty sure the pill was down before he even realized what was going on.  I was hoping for the same success this morning, but Simon caught on to my shenanigans and he was ready for me. 

I lift kitty onto counter, get his butt in the crook of my arm, pry open his jaws and quickly get the pill as far back in his throat as I can get while still avoiding his razor sharp teeth.  Kitty spits the pill onto the counter.  Try again, this time kitty is a lot more squirmy.  And stronger.  Pill in.  Kitty spits it out.  Again.  Pill in.  Pill out, and stuck to the side of his mouth.  By this time, the pill is wet and dissolving in my hands.  DANG IT.  Again!  Pill in.  Kitty spits it half-way across the floor.  Kitty secretly laughs at my incompetence.  How he’s even getting it out of his mouth is beyond me as I’m holding it closed.  TF!  Finally, after the fourth (fifth? sixth?) try, the pill goes down.  THANK GOD.  I might have more of the pill on my fingers, though.

Not one to let my cat outwit me, I prevailed tonight when I decided to hide the pill in some chunks of tuna (credit goes to Josh for this idea).  There was a moment when, while he was chewing, he got this very perplexed look on his face and I thought that maybe he figured out my evil plot, but he appeared oblivious. 

Or maybe he did realize what was going on and he’s secretly plotting to suffocate me with a pillow while I sleep. Oh well, at least I got that pill in him!

Today I ordered some chicken flavored pill pockets, which are little hollow treats that you can slip the pill into.  In theory, Simon should be so thrilled with the treat that he’ll gulp it down without even noticing it’s not really a treat.  He can be a finicky eater, so I don’t know how well this will work.

The vet says that I should start to see improvement in as little as a week. I have to take him back in a month to get his T4 level tested again to see if the pills are working.  If so, yay!  If not, I don’t know what the next step(s) will be.  I’ve had this little kitty for 15 years and he means the world to me.  Rest assured, I’m willing to try pretty much anything to keep him around for as long as I possibly can.

 
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