Hi Laurie,
Wendy kindly stated the options available for treating acromegaly. My cat received his diagnosis confirmation at Purdue University Veterinary Teaching Hospital, and they were willing to do both the removal of the pituitary gland, and the SRT, however, they had never done either procedure on an acromegalic cat before. I was not comfortable with giving them the go ahead, since acromegaly in general was new territory for them. They told me they had seen only 1 other cat with the condition. My boy was
extremely difficult to handle when he received medical care, the trips we made to the teaching hospital were about 1 1/2 hours away, and those days would completely exhaust him...he was also born blind which added more stress...traveling farther than 1 state over seemed overwhelming.
As far as managing the acro, I agree with Wendy in that the diabetes must be controlled first and foremost. I was very lucky with Peek-a-Boo in that he finally settled into his 4U BID of Lantus. He had neuropathy, where he walked with his feet flat on the ground, and his front paws were "bent" lower on the wrists (if that makes sense?). You could actually hear him thumping down the hallway. As soon as his numbers were in control, this was completely reversed in a relatively short time. He somehow managed to stay regulated at that dose for over a year. He also consistently ate LARGE amounts of food.
He was also diagnosed with HCM (hypertrophic cardiomyopathy- acro symptom) which we took 1 tablet of Plavix daily to ward of any blood clots. He suffered from chronic constipation as well (most likely from diabetes dehydration/acro causing enlarged organs which press on colon), but I used Miralax daily mixed in his food.
At the beginning of this year, his kidneys started to show signs of damage. His phosphorus levels were elevated so I switched to low P food, and he started spilling protein into the urine (proteinuria). This, unfortunately, was also due to the dreaded acro.
I lost him on April 13. He became constipated to the point of needing an enema after a day of producing no stool. He was sedated, treated and released to me but never fully "came out of it" after returning home. I rushed him back to the clinic, but his body was shutting down. I sadly had to have him put to sleep. He was 11.
This all occurred over the span of about 2 years...22 months to be exact.
Please feel free to ask anything....I could talk about my beloved Peek-a-Boo all day. Best wishes to you and Scarlette.
Dawn
