Patti and Merlin said:
Dear Venita
Please please I mean no disrespect to anything that has been done or what all you have been doing. I hope you know that. Many of us have been following Tidus' case.
This poor kitty has been thru so much. So much of what he has been thru is so typical of what an acrocat presents with many times. The thickening of the intestine, the enlarged atrium, the cardiac murmur, the 'pancreatitis" he is now experiencing, and that he is a large cat altho NOT the typical signs of an acrocat. The incredibly hi sugars despite going up on insulin doses and now changing insulins. The cough he is experiencing is most likely due to narrowing of his airway due to enlargement of tissue there. YOu really aren't "just" dealing with pancreatitis right now. I could go on more about more of the signs he is showing that you have all talked about.
Please I hope you can understand how I am saying this but this cat is most likely an acrocat. With all the money you are spending on everything - an acro/iaa test SHOULD be one of the tests they are running right now. It would explain everything. And it would help determine the next step in so much of this cat's care - such as getting him started on heart meds sooner than later. Literature suggests that the sooner we get these cats started on this the better their prognosis. Please I'm not understanding why so much is spent on everything else and the delay on this. Is it the vet that is not believing -
I hope you know me well enough that I don't jump in on every cat to say they are acro - but this one is showing all the "subtle" signs there are - and it would be worth every penny to have that test sent while he is there already having other tests sent. He is so sick now.
Thank you so much for letting me post - again I hope you know I mean no disrespect to anyone here!
kindly
patti and always in my heart Merlin - an acrocat that took >1year to be diagnosed - something we hope doesn't have to happen any longer
Patti,
Thank you for your input. We had planned to have the local vet pull blood for the Acro/IAA tests on Monday next, provided MSU starts the test the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. I still need to call MSU about the lab's holiday schedule.
As I am sure you and the other Acro folks know, MSU only starts the Acro tests on Wednesdays. To have the ER vet pull blood
right now as of 1:48pm Eastern time on Tuesday would likely have meant the blood sitting in the MSU lab for a week waiting for the test start next Wednesday (if they are even starting the test that day). It certainly made more sense to me to wait until next Monday to pull the blood. And I saw no need to pay the premium for the ER vet to pull the blood, fill out the paperwork, and ship the blood when DCIN can have the local vet pull the blood and then DCIN do the paperwork and ship the blood.
Even if we had gotten the blood today, gotten the test started tomorrow, there really is no
right now with a test with a 4-9 day turnaround on the results. Even if there were a
right now on the test results, and the tests said Tidus were Acro (or IAA), I don't see how that would change anything about the course of treatment for the pancreatitis DX or the suspected IBD/lymphoma DX. It might change is his insulin therapy. And, I would not characterize his BG levels as "incredibly high." He hangs out in the mid- to high 200s. Higher than we would like? Absolutely? And we saw a glimpse of reaction yesterday to a reasonably small dose of Levemir (1.5U) with a 175 at +5.
I scheduled Tidus's cardio consult as of this morning at 7am. That will go forward regardless of his Acro status. Some cats do have heart enlargement without Acromegaly. If the cardio vet says he needs heart meds, Tidus will get heart meds regardless of his Acro status. We certainly would not withhold needed heart meds because of a lack of an Acro test, a lack of an Acro test result, or a lack of an Acro diagnosis. If you are saying that the heart medications the cardio vet would prescribe would differ depending on Tidus's Acro status, we will cross that bridge when we get the Acro results back--after the Cardio consult on November 21. Just in case you are suggesting that the cardio vet would not prescribe heart meds unless "pushed" to do so because of an Acro DX, please be assured that we will definitely alert the Cardio vet to the suspected Acro in advance of or during the consult.
So, please, trust me when I say that provided we see no reasonable reaction to the Levemir by next Monday, which we likely will not given the pancreatitis set-back. we will be having blood drawn for the tests, provided the MSU Acro testing is being started next Wednesday despite the Thursday holiday. OK?