Linda and Bear Man
Member Since 2009
Last week: http://felinediabetes.com/FDMB/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=21152
Bear Man has had some success with his Aranesp treatments for anemia:
July 15 PCV=.18 Shot of iron dextran and Aranesp 6.25 mcg given
July 22 PCV= .20 Shot of Aranesp 6.25 mcg given. BP stable.
July 29 PCV = .28 Aranesp shot skipped. BP stable.
Aug 3 PCV = .28 Aranesp shot skipped. BP stable. Bloodwork done and hematocrit = .33!
The big surprise was that hematocrit being so much higher than the PCV (they are two ways of measuring the same thing). The .33 is a normal number, and is the highest he has been in over a year (it's quite a bit higher than Teddy's .29). The vet and I were both quite relieved that we had elected not to shoot based on the PCV of .28. The reason we did the bloodwork was twofold: (1) he had had a bad week with vomiting and lethargy and (2) the vet, who is not his regular vet, was shocked to see the number and severity of his focal seizures. These seizures have been worsening over time, and are happening at least once a minute, and involve his head and paws. I may end up taking him for a neuro consult, although he cannot undergo sedation for any imaging of the head, but we are first trying him on a course of gabapentin to see if it helps, and if he can tolerate it. His other blood values came back fairly stable. His phosphorus is higher, due to my allowing him to eat food that he likes, and his thyroid is higher. He will go back to the vet on Tuesday for recheck to see if the PCV is holding.
The last few days he has been feeling quite well. He has been able to climb his stair and get up on the bed, which is something he has not been able to do in a very long time. I became aware of this in the middle of the night when I was awakened by hissing and yowling. Teddy was in HIS bed on the foot of my bed, and Bear was perched precariously on the very corner of the bed trying to steal the cat bed away from Teddy, with much resistance. I leapt up and snatched Bear before he could fall off the bed and break a hip. Since then, he has gone back to his favorite old routine of climbing up on the bed hourly during the night, grabbing a tupperware snack on the bed, and climbing down on his bench on the other side. It effectively prevents me from getting any sleep at all, but it is great to see him having a bit of his old mobility back.
Twitchy Bear Man video:

Bear Man has had some success with his Aranesp treatments for anemia:
July 15 PCV=.18 Shot of iron dextran and Aranesp 6.25 mcg given
July 22 PCV= .20 Shot of Aranesp 6.25 mcg given. BP stable.
July 29 PCV = .28 Aranesp shot skipped. BP stable.
Aug 3 PCV = .28 Aranesp shot skipped. BP stable. Bloodwork done and hematocrit = .33!
The big surprise was that hematocrit being so much higher than the PCV (they are two ways of measuring the same thing). The .33 is a normal number, and is the highest he has been in over a year (it's quite a bit higher than Teddy's .29). The vet and I were both quite relieved that we had elected not to shoot based on the PCV of .28. The reason we did the bloodwork was twofold: (1) he had had a bad week with vomiting and lethargy and (2) the vet, who is not his regular vet, was shocked to see the number and severity of his focal seizures. These seizures have been worsening over time, and are happening at least once a minute, and involve his head and paws. I may end up taking him for a neuro consult, although he cannot undergo sedation for any imaging of the head, but we are first trying him on a course of gabapentin to see if it helps, and if he can tolerate it. His other blood values came back fairly stable. His phosphorus is higher, due to my allowing him to eat food that he likes, and his thyroid is higher. He will go back to the vet on Tuesday for recheck to see if the PCV is holding.
The last few days he has been feeling quite well. He has been able to climb his stair and get up on the bed, which is something he has not been able to do in a very long time. I became aware of this in the middle of the night when I was awakened by hissing and yowling. Teddy was in HIS bed on the foot of my bed, and Bear was perched precariously on the very corner of the bed trying to steal the cat bed away from Teddy, with much resistance. I leapt up and snatched Bear before he could fall off the bed and break a hip. Since then, he has gone back to his favorite old routine of climbing up on the bed hourly during the night, grabbing a tupperware snack on the bed, and climbing down on his bench on the other side. It effectively prevents me from getting any sleep at all, but it is great to see him having a bit of his old mobility back.
Twitchy Bear Man video:
