Carol in Chicago
Member Since 2017
Rosie went to see the vetty bean today. This was a "routine" follow-up from her last visit 3 months ago. Since she has lost some weight, we decided to run full blood work. That should come back by tomorrow. The only other notable finding at this point is constipation related. She needs an enema now based on the vet exam. I wish I could better determine the early warning signs as it seems I have been waiting too long. She had just made a deposit in the LB right before we let for the vet. Looks like she is going on her own, just not enough. 
Her BG is very strongly influenced by constipation, so I could try to monitor that more closely for a trigger condition. Vet also suggested she just might need a routine clean out every 2 weeks or so...
I got a refresher lesson from the vet today re: how to monitor hydration status. I had been worried about Rose just in the last week or so because her skin doesn't rebound as it has in the past and I thought it was dehydration. Vet reminded me that in an older cat (just like people) skin is not as responsive. Better to monitor hydration via gums rebounding in color after pressure. Rose didn't mind this when he did it, but I am not so sure she will let me check her mouth in this way. Still, good lesson given the importance of hydration. He agreed her skin was slow to rebound, but confirmed no hydration problem via checking her gums. This is good because she gets SQ fluids every day and if she was dehydrated I don't know what else I could do.
Previous.
Her BG is very strongly influenced by constipation, so I could try to monitor that more closely for a trigger condition. Vet also suggested she just might need a routine clean out every 2 weeks or so...
I got a refresher lesson from the vet today re: how to monitor hydration status. I had been worried about Rose just in the last week or so because her skin doesn't rebound as it has in the past and I thought it was dehydration. Vet reminded me that in an older cat (just like people) skin is not as responsive. Better to monitor hydration via gums rebounding in color after pressure. Rose didn't mind this when he did it, but I am not so sure she will let me check her mouth in this way. Still, good lesson given the importance of hydration. He agreed her skin was slow to rebound, but confirmed no hydration problem via checking her gums. This is good because she gets SQ fluids every day and if she was dehydrated I don't know what else I could do.
Previous.



It’s so hard juggling kitties every move so please know we’re all in the same boat doing the best we can.