Tara & Ivana (GA)
Member Since 2015
Last week's post
All I can say is:





It's been another green week!
Ivana had her follow-up vet visit today, with some good news and some not quite good news. The tests didn't need to be as thorough as last month, but the essential kidney stuff was checked. Results are in the labs tab, but the gist is that her creatinine is down (yay!) but her urea/BUN is up (boo). Phosphorous is also stable (yay!). She doesn't need subq fluids yet, nor a phosphorous binder - we'll just keep her on the low-phos diet she's been on since her CKD dx.
She will be starting on Calcitrol next week, which (I think) keeps the balance of phosphorous, calcium and potassium in check as a preventative rather than waiting til we see a problem to fix it (I could be wrong, I haven't got up to that bit yet in Tanya's book and it made sense when the vet told me but I'm not sure I've remembered it right). She will be having more tests on these levels after two weeks on Calcitrol. Vet offered a test for parathyroid but that one test alone was $340 and given that it wasn't an essential test, I reluctantly declined and opted for monitoring of the Ca, Ph and K via bloods instead which the vet was perfectly happy with and said my money would be better spent elsewhere anyway (phew!)
Could not get a reliable blood pressure reading again
There was one reading which appeared to be too low to be correct (60-something or 80-something), so I guess that's better than nothing but it will be good when the vet's Doppler machine arrives. Vet checked her eyes as a secondary monitoring tool.
Asked about the increased appetite, and yes the cold weather can make a difference in cats just like in humans. This week hasn't been as cold and her appetite has returned to normal, so I guess that's what it was.
Also asked about the nighttime yowling, and how it stopped for about a week after we installed the nightlights but that it's started again. Vet suggested it could definitely still be a vision issue, or it could be an age thing (dementia etc) although I don't think that's likely because she's still got all her smarts about her during daylight hours. It could be a blood pressure issue, and although it's common for CKD kitties to have blood pressure issues, vet did not want to prescribe blood pressure meds without an actual reading which is totally fair enough. She is going to look into herbal calmatives that won't interfere with any of her other issues and will hopefully help with whatever is distressing her.
Here's a pic of the Princess waiting patiently for her blood tests while at the vet today:
All I can say is:
Ivana had her follow-up vet visit today, with some good news and some not quite good news. The tests didn't need to be as thorough as last month, but the essential kidney stuff was checked. Results are in the labs tab, but the gist is that her creatinine is down (yay!) but her urea/BUN is up (boo). Phosphorous is also stable (yay!). She doesn't need subq fluids yet, nor a phosphorous binder - we'll just keep her on the low-phos diet she's been on since her CKD dx.
She will be starting on Calcitrol next week, which (I think) keeps the balance of phosphorous, calcium and potassium in check as a preventative rather than waiting til we see a problem to fix it (I could be wrong, I haven't got up to that bit yet in Tanya's book and it made sense when the vet told me but I'm not sure I've remembered it right). She will be having more tests on these levels after two weeks on Calcitrol. Vet offered a test for parathyroid but that one test alone was $340 and given that it wasn't an essential test, I reluctantly declined and opted for monitoring of the Ca, Ph and K via bloods instead which the vet was perfectly happy with and said my money would be better spent elsewhere anyway (phew!)
Could not get a reliable blood pressure reading again
Asked about the increased appetite, and yes the cold weather can make a difference in cats just like in humans. This week hasn't been as cold and her appetite has returned to normal, so I guess that's what it was.
Also asked about the nighttime yowling, and how it stopped for about a week after we installed the nightlights but that it's started again. Vet suggested it could definitely still be a vision issue, or it could be an age thing (dementia etc) although I don't think that's likely because she's still got all her smarts about her during daylight hours. It could be a blood pressure issue, and although it's common for CKD kitties to have blood pressure issues, vet did not want to prescribe blood pressure meds without an actual reading which is totally fair enough. She is going to look into herbal calmatives that won't interfere with any of her other issues and will hopefully help with whatever is distressing her.
Here's a pic of the Princess waiting patiently for her blood tests while at the vet today:

