According to the vet, she probably scratched her ear and nicked a blood vessel, causing a hematoma. They drained her ear, but it seems to be (fortunately slowly) refilling. We’re planning to schedule another appointment for Monday, when they said they could basically sew her ear together to prevent it from happening again. I would have guessed they would go for cauterization, but apparently not.

edit; She’s also quite underweight (apparently she’s six pounds). I thought that was because she’s getting old (she’s approaching fifteen years) but the vet says she just needs to eat more. We got her some wet food to entice her appetite.

  • CreateProblems@corndog.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    edit-2
    1 hour ago

    Re: getting her to eat

    Our 12-year-old kitty was recently diagnosed with kidney disease, and on top of that she had a kidney infection. After several weeks of antibiotics the kidney infection has cleared up, but we’ve been struggling with getting her to eat enough, especially while she was really sick.

    Finding the right wet food has really helped. She can only eat kidney-approved foods right now so our options are more limited. Turns out she does not care for the paté style wet foods but she LOVES the Royal Canin options with “little slivers.” I think she prefers that she can pick up the bits in her mouth rather than licking a clump of meat lol. The Royal Canin kidney diet options are specifically designed to be appealing to cats who might have a limited appetite, and I can definitely vouch for its effectiveness with our girl.

    I know you’re not needing kidney-friendly foods for your girl, but my point is, if she doesn’t like the first wet food you try, they have different options and maybe she’ll prefer another type. So experimenting might help.

    At one point we needed an appetite stimulant for our girl, so that’s an option too. The vet gave us a transdermal medication that you rub on your cat’s ear (so they can’t lick or rub it off before it gets absorbed.) That might be an option for you, although probably just in the good ear right now 🙂 The appetite stimulant REALLY helped us when our girl was in the midst of her infection. She went from basically not eating anything to being so hungry that she was purring while eating her food cause she was so happy 🥹

    Originally we used the appetite stimulant every day, but it’s not necessarily good for long-term use in cats with kidney disease, so we’re trying to figure out the minimum dose to keep her eating. She got a half dose about four days ago, which kicked up her appetite. And I think getting used to eating more food again is relatively self-sustaining for her, because she’s still eating more all these days later. So yeah, I can also vouch for the effectiveness of the appetite stimulant.

    The brand name is Mirataz

  • DampSquid@feddit.uk
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    15
    ·
    7 hours ago

    If you need her to eat more, I’ve never seen our cats (and every other cat so far) go nuts for food like they do for those creamy treats in a tube.

  • Naich@lemmings.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    7
    ·
    8 hours ago

    Bless her. We had an elderly cat with an ear like that. It looked horrible but it didn’t bother her, so we didn’t put her through the stress of operating on it.

    • toynbee@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      7
      ·
      8 hours ago

      She is an old cat for sure.

      It’s hard to say whether it’s bothering her. The ear was very visibly swollen before the draining. She never used to hold it sideways like that, either - that’s developed over the last two weeks or so.

      She’s mostly been minding her own business - we had trouble even finding her to take her to the appointment - but recently she’s been very clingy and rubbing (to be fair) both ears against us. I suspect it’s itchy at the very least.

      Honestly, she’s so old I’m just worried about her.

      • Naich@lemmings.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        7
        ·
        7 hours ago

        I think when you have an elderly cat, you have to just concentrate on what will give her the best quality of life for however long she has left. In our case the root cause of the ear problem that caused the scratching and the hematoma was never found because we felt that subjecting an elderly cat to an operation would cause her more stress than just living with it. The vet gave her antibiotics and pain killers, and put her on a low dose of steroids that she took for the rest of her life. The hematoma turned into fibrosis and although it looked horrible, the ear stopped bothering her once she got used to it.

        With hindsight it was 100% the right decision, and she lived her best life for another 18 months, right up to the last day.