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The last 48 hours have been... chaotic. We have a 4-year old female calico-coloured Persian. Yesterday morning my wife noticed that she suddenly had gasping, laboured breathing. We thought it was an asthma attack (she is prone to these), so we administered her inhaler. But it didn't help. It was a really sudden change- she went from happy and eating to desperately gasping for air within a matter of minutes. We immediately brought her to our regular vet and upon examining her the vet noticed that the soft tissue beneath my cat's tongue swelled up significantly, and that's what was causing the breathing obstruction. But he remarked that he had never seen a cat's mouth swell up so much so quickly. Her lungs were fine, but her mouth was seriously swelled up. He referred us to a local emergency 24/7 vet since they'd be able to get blood work and comprehensive testing done much faster. Our cat's breathing was obstructed for about ~5 hours. But as she stayed at the emergency vet, her swelling started to slowly subside on its own. The emergency vet ran a number of tests, and had the following results:
The emergency vet did notice a small, red lesion on her gums when they had initially examined her. But that red spot disappeared after she spent the night at the emergency vet. Even they seemed a bit stumped as to what could've caused this. Their theory: an insect stung or bit her in her mouth, and it caused this massive swelling. They didn't treat her with any antibiotics, and saw no reason to do so after releasing her to our care. In the doctor's words, "Time seemed to have fixed the swelling." Our cat is now back home with us and healthy again, but any thoughts as to what could have caused this? We didn't introduce any new food into her diet. We don't even use strong cleaning products in the house due to our cats' asthma. We really want to avoid having her go through this, again. It even left vets from more than one clinic/hospital scratching their heads. melon cat fucked around with this message at 23:33 on Dec 9, 2016 |
# ? Dec 9, 2016 23:14 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 06:36 |
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Is there any way she could have been stung by a bee? My husband's family's cat took down a bee which stung her in the throat. They couldn't find her despite several hours of calling her in and found her the next morning semi-conscious hiding in the bushes. A trip to the vet later and she was fine. Idiot cat still goes after bees.
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# ? Dec 10, 2016 18:07 |
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take me to the beaver posted:Is there any way she could have been stung by a bee?
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# ? Dec 10, 2016 21:53 |
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I used to have a cat who would play with spiders, get bitten on the paw and then proceed to limp around for the next few days melodramatically because of the small spider bite. It would leave next to no mark if we didn't catch it almost immediately. However, I know for a fact that I personally have had some spider bites that caused a great amount of pain and swelling. Is it possible she ate a spider and it bit her on the way down - something more venomous than your average house spider?
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# ? Dec 10, 2016 23:17 |
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Chaosfeather posted:I used to have a cat who would play with spiders, get bitten on the paw and then proceed to limp around for the next few days melodramatically because of the small spider bite. It would leave next to no mark if we didn't catch it almost immediately. However, I know for a fact that I personally have had some spider bites that caused a great amount of pain and swelling. Is it possible she ate a spider and it bit her on the way down - something more venomous than your average house spider? We don't really *get* spiders that venomous that far north, at least, I live in Maine and in general it's cold for any particularly scary bugs to survive, especially by this time of the year. I do think it's possible your cat night have had an allergic reaction to something it consumed, though. Once you've ruled out abscess/infection I'm not sure what else it could be!
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# ? Dec 11, 2016 00:56 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 06:36 |
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Chaosfeather posted:I used to have a cat who would play with spiders, get bitten on the paw and then proceed to limp around for the next few days melodramatically because of the small spider bite. It would leave next to no mark if we didn't catch it almost immediately. However, I know for a fact that I personally have had some spider bites that caused a great amount of pain and swelling. Is it possible she ate a spider and it bit her on the way down - something more venomous than your average house spider? kaworu posted:I do think it's possible your cat night have had an allergic reaction to something it consumed, though. Once you've ruled out abscess/infection I'm not sure what else it could be! melon cat fucked around with this message at 05:19 on Dec 11, 2016 |
# ? Dec 11, 2016 05:17 |