Well, I worked hard to minimize allergens in the house and switched her food
around, with some success. She went a year with no lesions of any kind,
first time in the 5.5 years I have had her!! AND no asthma attacks.
Until this morning. She had a coughing/wheezing fit and I took her right in.
She is fine except for some new plaque buildup, the congestion, and slightly
runny stools, which she has had for a while. I thought maybe my giving her
new flavors of Fancy Feast did it--the fish flavors instead of beef and
chicken--but the vet said diarrhea is another side effect of the allergy
complex EGC. She gave me a liquid medicine (metronidazole) and a little
syringe, I am to dose her 0.5 ml twice a day. It is supposed to restore her
normal gut flora.
So, I am thinking she needs to have two Depo shots a year, that it might not
be the best thing to try to take her down to one a year. She's been frisky
and happy, but itchy and congested, too.
I don't think that twice a year is over kill on this if you can keep it
under control using other methods along with it.
I had a cat who had severe asthma she took theophylline on a daily basis
along with lasix. I did like you and minimized everything that could
trigger and event. I was pretty good at watching her body language and
could tell when she was about to have an attack and could increase her
prednisone accordingly prior to the attack to minimize it. But sometimes it
didn't work and she still ended up with a shot.
Sometimes you have to outweigh the risk verses the benefits.
Celeste
"cybercat" <cyber...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:f3ka2d$hqp$1...@aioe.org...
[...]
> So, I am thinking she needs to have two Depo shots a year, that
> it might not be the best thing to try to take her down to one a
> year. She's been frisky and happy, but itchy and congested, too.
Good post, thanks for thinking of this. As you know my Shamrock has
the same problems that Gracie has, except no sign of asthma. I
haven't been successful in eliminating the allergens that cause his
flare-ups, but the Cyclosporine has been mostly effective, with
only one time now needing a boost from one Depo shot in almost the
last year. I have noticed he has stinky runny poop now, but until
you posted that I forgot about Shadow and his IBD, and IBD is also
an auto-immune disease. That is treated with steroids, too, if
altering the diet doesn't help. So you're right, they are related.
I guess I'll have to talk with his vet about this. He might benefit
from 2x yearly, too. Gosh I hate overloading his system with drugs
but as Celeste said you have to measure the risks against the
benefits and do what helps their QOL.
--
Cheryl
Cheryl, I forgot to say, that his is what my vet said--she actually
mentioned that "these cats with autoimmune deficiency often
develop IBD." From reading about that in this group, I knew
it could be bad, and she agreed. Thanks for mentioning it.
I think Depo Medrol can be a miracle drug when used
carefully, for some cats.
Granted, Rhonda had a terrible experience with a similar
drug, was it one dose and the cat becale diabetic? Poor
baby.
One scary thing: this vet convinced me that Gracie has got
to have a dental, with anesthetic, ugh that scares me to death.
She said complications are very rare, and that given Gracie's
risk of infection, it is worth the risk of the anesthesia. If I do
it I am going to be a wreck until she is back in my arms, awake.
And I will do it. I want to give her every chance.
ahhhh, gad, I would have been a wreck.
Thing is, the vet showed me the tartar buildup on
one side--just one, isn't that odd? She is really neat,
she said, "in our teeth and cats' teeth, plaque is like
a little bacteria castle. It takes calcium and other things
from our blood and builds a nice little home for itself."
I love my new vet. She takes time to explain more
complicated things as well, like my Boo's fainting
spells and how they relate to her hyperthyroid. The
old vet put her on beta blockers but never bothered
to explain. This one told me about hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy in hyperT cats, and most importantly,
that once the thyroid levels are corrected it is COMPLETELY
REVERSABLE, which means she has probably had no
business being on the beta blocker this long. And this vet
did not mind talking about Boo even though it was during
Gracie's appointment.