Register a SA Forums Account here!
JOINING THE SA FORUMS WILL REMOVE THIS BIG AD, THE ANNOYING UNDERLINED ADS, AND STUPID INTERSTITIAL ADS!!!

You can: log in, read the tech support FAQ, or request your lost password. This dumb message (and those ads) will appear on every screen until you register! Get rid of this crap by registering your own SA Forums Account and joining roughly 150,000 Goons, for the one-time price of $9.95! We charge money because it costs us money per month for bills, and since we don't believe in showing ads to our users, we try to make the money back through forum registrations.
 
  • Post
  • Reply
Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Let me preface this with I've already taken my cat to see the vet and they have no idea. First suggestion sight unseen was a cat bite. Once the vet took a look, he was baffled. Ruled out cat aggression and said it didn't look like allergies or fleas either. Ears were clear. I got some soothing foam medication that doesn't seem to do anything.

More info: He's been on Hill's c/d canned wet food for years. The pandemic forced us to switch particular flavors a couple of times due to availability, but he's currently eating a chicken product that he's tolerated since at least 2020.

So my cat Echo has a bald spot between his shoulder blades that isn't getting better. I first noticed it a couple weeks before Thanksgiving. He'd been scratching that side of himself and I thought maybe he'd clawed himself open. Hadn't trimmed his nails in a while and they'd gotten a bit gnarly.



It grew a little wider and then stopped. The skin cleared up. Eventually noticed the fur starting to grow back. I thought things were going good.

Just before Thanksgiving, an adjacent spot appeared. It almost looked like the fur had been ripped out. We thought maybe he was rubbing himself up against something but couldn't find the source. Thanksgiving comes and goes. The spot got a whole lot wider but no sign of skin irritation. He scratched at his shoulder with his foot but it didn't look like he can reach?

Took him to the vet. Got absolutely nothing useful out of it. Vet was baffled and gave us some foam that's supposed to calm down irritated skin. Lo and behold, a few days later and the bald spot is now a large patch.



The wetness on the fur was me trying to clean up the wound a bit. I touched the exposed skin and it felt kind of dry to me. So I put some coconut oil on him just to see if that helped. It's been a day and the skin looks a lot less irritated and there hasn't been any noticeable itching.



Help me goons, what's wrong with my fat boy?

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

No evidence of fleas noted by myself or the vet. My other cat has shown no sign that anything is wrong either.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

I don’t think so? Grooming is usually done to Echo’s forehead and chest, before the other cat gets grumpy and flees.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Already booked an appointment with a different vet for this Friday. In the meantime, I put a little Santa vest on Echo so he wouldn't scratch or lick the area any further. I'm definitely wondering if it might be an autoimmune thing, since he got swollen beans a few years back at an old apartment. The vet gave steroids and that worked like a charm.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Spoke with a different vet. Echo got an antibiotic shot and will be on steroids for the next 3 weeks. Fingers crossed.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Echo did well on steroids, but started scratching himself again once we dropped down to every other day dosing. Vet suggested we switch diets, which is a pain since he's already on Hills c/d, but we're going to hold off for a few months since we're planning to move in that time. Less stressors the better. Problem: ongoing. Probably just gonna shut this thread due to lack of interest/information. Sorry goons.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Alright then. Echo is back on steroids once a day at the original dosing. He's still gently scratching at the area? But not causing any more wounds on his back. The vet wanted to drop the dosage to one pill a day instead of two since we're going to use this for a temporary solution until we settle into our new home whenever that's going to be. I guess I'm going to follow the vet's plan unless he starts clawing himself open again. I'm also second guessing my decision to hold off on switching diets because I hate seeing my cat suffering like this. Bleh.

Dazerbeams fucked around with this message at 19:45 on Jan 3, 2022

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

The vet actually called me up to do a follow-up and said some scratching was understandable as it might take a while for the steroid to reach adequate levels in his system. This is after being on steroids for 2 weeks and a not so great attempt at weaning him off it.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

The fur is starting to grow in and no new scabs so the steroids are helping. We’re going to be moving in a few weeks so once the cats get acclimated to their new home, I’m going to wean Echo off the steroids at the same time as I introduce the new hypoallergenic diet. Purina pro plan veterinary diet HA.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009



Dazerbeams fucked around with this message at 00:45 on Jan 21, 2022

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

He’s been so easy to pill because I’ve been sticking it on the end of an churu inaba stick and he laps it right up. It’s a pity his brother hates it because Leo is now limping and we’re putting him on pain meds assuming it’s just a soft tissue injury. Echo is a bully and chases Leo around whenever he gets real hungry.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Since Echo has been on the steroids, his skin has been really clear and healthy looking. And the vet didn't suggest any parasites so I think it's safe to say it's not mange. Leo hasn't shown any itchiness either. And no shaving the kitties. Their coats are too silky smooth to do that.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Not really an update on Echo, but I've slipped him some gabapentin to test whether it agrees with him. We'll be flying in a few weeks and I'm hoping a bit of meds might mean he won't scream his little head off for 8 hours straight. It's been 3 hours and he's just been snoozing like a champ.

Leo also seems to be limping less. He has another day on everything, and then it will be gabapentin only until Thursday. We have a vet appointment on Friday to assess how he's doing but I'm hopeful.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Leo is back to normal, hurray. Echo has more fur coming in but it's still kind of sparse on the left side. Going to chalk that up to the steroids not completely masking the itchiness that is possibly coming from the diet. I need to call my vet again and ask about what to do regarding wet food. The new prescription diet only comes in dry but they both seem bad at drinking water and I have no idea how to get fluids into them if its not through food.

Also, we had to pack the cats into the car for 6 hours while we had an open house, and they. Yowled. The. Entire. Time. Going to drug them with gabapentin (already been previously tested on both) and pray they are not horrible noise machines when we fly. Which is this Thursday. So long as they aren't completely wigging out, I'll start feeding them the new diet while we're stuck in a hotel suite waiting for all our furniture to ship to our new address.

Dazerbeams fucked around with this message at 06:51 on Feb 7, 2022

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Slugworth posted:

Hills Z/D is a great substitute for the Purina HA, and comes in wet for cats.

Unfortunately, they're on C/D which is why we're switching to Purina HA.

The cats traveled like angels. Only a few yowls while we were rolling around the airports, and some towards the very end of the last flight when the plane braked extremely hard. They are taking to their temporary lodgings with gusto. I suppose it helps to no longer be trapped in tiny carriers surrounded by unknown terrors. In a day or so I'm going to give them a tiny bit of the HA mixed in with their standard diet and see how they react.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

No upset tummies or other digestive issues from the cats. They seem to prefer the HA so I’m going ahead with giving them more.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Started to wean Echo off the pednisolone and immediately began to see scabs forming on his shoulder blades. So we're going back to steroids full time to give the HA diet a while longer to settle with his system.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

So it's been about 2 months since Echo started the HA diet. I haven't noticed him scratching at all recently, and there's only the tiniest bare patch left after having such a huge bald spot earlier. Funnily enough, the fur coming back in is a lot more salt and pepper than his usual coat. Fingers crossed as I start to wean him off the steroids again.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

Barely more than a day on every other day dosing, and the bald spot has grown. Immediately going back to full steroids. I spoke with the vet and we both agree this is not a food thing, so yay I get to switch the cats back to their original diet.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

No, and at this point we have to take Echo to a new vet since we're on a different coast. Luckily I found one that is taking new patients relatively quickly.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

New vet is wondering if the itching is psychosomatic after the initial cause came and went. I guess we'll never know because she did a skin scrape for mites (negative) and can't think of anything else. So we're transitioning Echo onto amitriptyline as a potential long term medication alternative to prednisolone. He's shown signs of constipation but that's it so far, so we're going to give both pills for a couple of weeks before attempting to wean off steroids once more.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

This is probably the last update. The amitriptyline gave Echo serious constipation and also triggered more hair loss within a few days of being on it. So Echo is just going to be on steroids indefinitely.

Mystery: Unsolved.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

The vet said that long term steroid use opens the door to urinary problems and diabetes, which I think Echo is already predisposed towards. The idiot loves gobbling up dry food which is how he developed crystals and needed to be put on the C/D diet in the first place. So relief from itchies now with the potential for other problems later.

I'm not sure going to a specialist is worth it, financially or emotionally. All the food and med switching on the cats was not a good experience for them and I'd hate to have to jump through a bunch of hoops only to end up keeping Echo on steroids anyways. Not to mention the expense that would come with it all. Things are good the way they are right now.

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

I tried weaning Echo off steroids based on a hunch, and it panned out nicely. It's been over a week without any drugs in his system and he's not scratching himself at all. I think what set him off was my pregnancy hormones. I was 3 months in when he first started itching, and then he had a major flare up when I finally went to the hospital for delivery but everything calmed down once I was home again. Even with a new baby around, Echo has been extremely chill and hyper affectionate when we can get our cuddles in. A good cat.


Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

Dazerbeams
Jul 8, 2009

The itching came back in August. So I put him on prednisolone again and now Echo has diabetes. Do goons have good recommendations for low carb dry food? Echo also has history with crystals so it would need to take that into account. The vet I’m seeing is going to look into switching him to a different science hills diet but I feel like there has to be a better option out there.

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Post
  • Reply