Well, I am still trying to determine what action to take - if any - for Ruffles.
Brief history: she has hyperthyroid, it is controlled by her meds. Vet detected a ehart murmur for the first time in January, whent he hyperthyroid was discovered.
She had a full elderly cat blood work up in early March, all looks well. Kidneys are fine. Actually, the vet said remarkably well for a cat this age! She has lost weight. At that visit in early March, the vet gave me some high calorie foods for her. She is eating it and appears not to be losing any additional weight. But I don't think she is gaining, either. She is 16 to 17 years of age.
The next options include:
1. getting an ultrasound and /or EKG (?) to see the heart and the extent of the heart murmur, if there is heart disease or a leaky valve
2. getting an ultrasound to see if there is anything in her abdomen to account for this weight loss. We are talking possible tumors in that case.
I am seriously considering doing nothing. She does not appear in pain, or uncomfortable. She jumps up on the bathroom sink each morning - and several times per day - for tap water. (Yeah, she has water bowls, and she DOES drink from that too, it is a cat thing.) She goes up and down the cellar stairs once or twice per day. She always appears with the other 7 if the can opener runs. She jumps up in mine or dad's lap if she wants to snuggle or just sit. Yes, she sits more and sleeps a little more than the others, but she is the oldest by 7 years.
Doing any of those tests will involve anesthesia which is a risk. And what do I do when we find something? Treatment for a cat this age, well, I just don't know. If it is a tumor, then is it cancerous or not, and how do we treat that, surgery, biopsy, more anethesia? And if it is heart disease, then I don't know how that gets treated.
I have tried google searches, didn't find anything that swayed me one way or the other.
So I am just wondering if anyone has experience with this.
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