scienceofcats
Member Since 2018
Lola has a small lesion on her chin for about a week and a half now (which I mentioned in my other thread here), and I’m back to square one now. Feeling frustrated and stressed out... if anyone can offer advice on what I can do differently, I’m all ears.
The wound started as a lesion seeping semi-purulent serous fluid (pink/yellow colour) and was maybe 3-4 mm wide if I had to guess. It’s on the bottom centre of her chin, pretty close to her mouth. The vet prescribed Isaderm (fusidic acid + betamethasone), a dual antibiotic/anti inflammatory cream. She also suggested using a cone, which I tried at first, but Lola was absolutely miserable in it, so I switched it out to a plush inflatable donut I got from the pet store that’s supposed to serve as an alternative.
She’s been wearing that and getting her cream twice a day for a week, and it was starting to heal really nicely. But last night is started to look a lot more inflamed (see picture, taken last night), and this morning it’s started seeping pinkish fluid again. I’m worried she’s found a way to scratch it despite the donut (although I’ve never seen her succeed at scratching it while I’m around). If that’s the case, she might’ve reopened it by scratching.
I’m suspicious that it might be because the donut is a bit looser now - she’s been aggressively scratching at it since day 1, and now it won’t stay fully inflated. I think she made a small puncture in it. For now, I’ve got the cone back on her, but I cut the excess plastic off so it’s not quite as huge on her head. She still hates it. I’ll try to get another donut today, but I’ve got my reservations about it’s effectiveness.
Is it possible to bandage a cat (in addition to using the donut)? Especially to keep her from rubbing the cream off, which she does regardless of the donut or the cone? Good idea, or bad idea? I was kind of wondering if you could use one of these, to add another barrier to keep it clean and undisturbed. Also, should I stick with the antibiotic cream, or would oral antibiotics be a better idea? I know very little about skin infections and wound closure in cats.
Here’s that picture from last night. It was still dry then, but looked much worse than it did the day before. The missing hair is just because the vet clipped that area to keep it cleaner.
The wound started as a lesion seeping semi-purulent serous fluid (pink/yellow colour) and was maybe 3-4 mm wide if I had to guess. It’s on the bottom centre of her chin, pretty close to her mouth. The vet prescribed Isaderm (fusidic acid + betamethasone), a dual antibiotic/anti inflammatory cream. She also suggested using a cone, which I tried at first, but Lola was absolutely miserable in it, so I switched it out to a plush inflatable donut I got from the pet store that’s supposed to serve as an alternative.
She’s been wearing that and getting her cream twice a day for a week, and it was starting to heal really nicely. But last night is started to look a lot more inflamed (see picture, taken last night), and this morning it’s started seeping pinkish fluid again. I’m worried she’s found a way to scratch it despite the donut (although I’ve never seen her succeed at scratching it while I’m around). If that’s the case, she might’ve reopened it by scratching.
I’m suspicious that it might be because the donut is a bit looser now - she’s been aggressively scratching at it since day 1, and now it won’t stay fully inflated. I think she made a small puncture in it. For now, I’ve got the cone back on her, but I cut the excess plastic off so it’s not quite as huge on her head. She still hates it. I’ll try to get another donut today, but I’ve got my reservations about it’s effectiveness.
Is it possible to bandage a cat (in addition to using the donut)? Especially to keep her from rubbing the cream off, which she does regardless of the donut or the cone? Good idea, or bad idea? I was kind of wondering if you could use one of these, to add another barrier to keep it clean and undisturbed. Also, should I stick with the antibiotic cream, or would oral antibiotics be a better idea? I know very little about skin infections and wound closure in cats.
Here’s that picture from last night. It was still dry then, but looked much worse than it did the day before. The missing hair is just because the vet clipped that area to keep it cleaner.
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