debodun
SF VIP
- Location
- way upstate in New York, USA
I took my two 16-year-old cats to the vet last week for their annual exams. The vet said she felt "something suspicious" in Adam's abdomen, but couldn't tell if it was a tumor or just something he hadn't passed yet (if you know what I mean). She said wait a few days and come back and she'd palpate it again. I did and the lump was still there.
They did an ultrasound (at no charge - it was for training a new veterinary assistant) and the diagnosis was lymphoma - a pretty common condition in older cats. I was given an oral solution of Prednisone to administer ($50 a small bottle), but it was only going to "buy some time" (once lymphoma is confirmed, the prognosis of survival is 2 to 8 months). I gave Adam the Prednisone and it made him foam at the mouth and drool. I called the vet right away and she said that the medicine is very bitter tasting and that would cause that reaction. Giving Adam that medicine almost seems as cruel as doing nothing. I also learned that once that medicine is started, you can't just stop administering it, it has to be cut down gradually.
BTW - It's Adam's photo I use for my avatar.
They did an ultrasound (at no charge - it was for training a new veterinary assistant) and the diagnosis was lymphoma - a pretty common condition in older cats. I was given an oral solution of Prednisone to administer ($50 a small bottle), but it was only going to "buy some time" (once lymphoma is confirmed, the prognosis of survival is 2 to 8 months). I gave Adam the Prednisone and it made him foam at the mouth and drool. I called the vet right away and she said that the medicine is very bitter tasting and that would cause that reaction. Giving Adam that medicine almost seems as cruel as doing nothing. I also learned that once that medicine is started, you can't just stop administering it, it has to be cut down gradually.
BTW - It's Adam's photo I use for my avatar.