Posted by:
catfanatik
at Wed Jan 31 20:25:53 2007 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by catfanatik ]
Hi, everyone. Just joined the boards! Purrrrrrrfect for me!
Anyway, one of my cats, Codi, who is going to be 15 this year, has always been quite healthy. In the past few months, I noticed that sometimes, his breathing is funny. His abdomen would rise and fall with his breathing in a much more pronounced way. His exhale seemed to short and forced. He was always purring loudly ... But he was eating, using the litter box, etc. I would notice this after he eats more, but I figured that's when I see him most (when I feed him in the morning before work, and when I feed him after work). Then -- one night last week I noticed he was in alot of discomfort. His purr was SOOO loud ... he looked/acted depressed, the expansion of his abdomen was so pronounced, and I saw him breathing with his mouth open. Next morning, I brought him to the vet. With two visits, they tested his blood, urine (for kidney problems), heart (echocardiogram), and of course a regular exam. His heart and kidney seem healthy. Blood tests came out OK. They diagnosed him with asthma, although admittedly at the vet his breathing was more "nervous" then anything else (he is a very good patient but of course gets really nervous). He got a shot of either cortisone or prednisone - which seemed to help for about a week! Last night I noticed his breathing was funny again after he ate dinner. He didn't eat alot. This morning he was FINE before I fed him. Thank goodness, I'm thinking a small asthma 'attack'. Then ..... tonight he is breathing funny AGAIN after eating. I also notice that once tonight, and once last night, he got a little 'twitch' above his hip. I think the left side. I'm feeding him what I've always fed him. He ONLY eats cat food, no table scraps or "human" food. And, only fish flavored. So now I'm thinking he has a digestive problem. But how can that affect his breathing? An obstruction? Also, his swallowing, after eating (just regular swallowing of saliva) seems exaggerated. He looks uncomfortable. He also didn't eat alot tonight, probably due to whatever pain he is in due to the little bit he did eat. I'm sorry this is so long. Of course, I will take him back to the vet, but I wanted to know if anyone else can relate?
Thanks, Carol
PS He doesnt' really 'throw up' often except for the occassional hairball, or if he eats with gusto and forgets to chew his dry cat food
[ Reply To This Message ] [ Subscribe to this Thread ] [ Hide Replies ]
- 14 yr old cat - discomfort after eating - catfanatik, Wed Jan 31 20:25:53 2007
|