Wow, Andy! What a story....and what a lucky kitty Aggie is.  Fortunate, too,
to be close to UC Davis.

Will keep your family and Aggie in my thoughts and prayers.  Bless you and
your wife for giving her so much love and attention.....with a new baby!
Yipes.  You're not getting any sleep at all, are you?!

Best wishes,  Sara


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Andy Domek
Sent: Monday, October 11, 2010 11:02 AM
To: FELV List
Subject: [Felvtalk] Aggie Introduction Part 2




Our story continues with Aggie introduction, part 2..
 
At this point, I would have chalked the seizure up to the mirtaziprine if it
wasn't for the fact that the day before we gave her the drug, Aggie was
meowing very loudly and had thrown up a bit of a clear liquid.  While my
wife didn't see it, she wasn't covered in drool and wasn't disoriented like
after the two known seizures.  So, we really don't know what happened, but
suspect it was a milder seizure type incident, and the mirtaziprine made
everything worse.  My vet, nor the vet I consulted with at UC Davis, thinks
the mirtaziprine was the major cause, though they did admit that it might be
what triggered the grand mal, and the later, smaller seizure.  So, to be on
the safe side, she has been on phenobarbitol for about a month now, with no
further seizures (my wife is home with our 3 month old baby, so she would
know).  The first three weeks on it were rough--sluggish, lots of sleeping,
and incoordinated with weakness in her hind legs.  (Cat, not the wife, for
those of you still reading!)  As of now, she is pretty much back to normal,
with just a little residual weakness.  Nowhere near where it was, though.
 
At present, still getting interferon every day, reloaded her with LTCI
weekly for three weeks, and now moving back to what had become the sweet
spot of every 2 weeks (next shot is this Saturday) and hoping for the best.
When we next test her blood in a few weeks, we might see if we can screen
for toxoplasmosis and cryptococcus (I know I misspelled this!) but didn't
have the cash to do it the first time around.  Another possibility is that
she might have been exposed to insecticide, as we had the outside of our
home sprayed for wasps a month or so ago.  The day of the first "incident"
it had rained, and she was sitting for most of the day at the screen door
looking out into the yard.  She was sitting over the door jam (but still
behind the screen, mere inches from an area that had been heavily sprayed,
as it was a problem area, and the recent rain could have easily washed some
of the toxins through the screen for her to breathe or even lick.  
 
Could have gotten to her paws, and she could have licked them--I don't know.
Other possibilities are of course, a brain tumor, the FELV crossing the
blood brain barrier, lymphoma of the gut that had metastatized (probably
misspelled this one too) into her brain but avoided the lungs and hasn't
swelled up her lymph nodes enough that the vet can feel, or the
aforementioned poisoning, crypto, and toxoplasmosis.   Our other cat, who
has lived with us for five years (and is FELV negative but vaccinated) was a
cat that settled on the front porch of the house we had just moved into.
So, it is possible he brought it in, but her immune system was strong enough
to deal with it for 5 years.
 
At this point, Aggie seems happy, weight is alright, appetite is good, and
her zest for life is apparent.  She doesn't mind being around the baby at
all, and we are trying to make every day a party for as long as we have her.
She is the protypical cat, in that she is alternatingly spunky, sweet, and
antisocial and loves to chase my wife's hair clips all over the house.
She'll ignore almost every other toy, but not those hair bands.    
 
Our FELV negative boy--Crookshanks, is the sweetest animal known to
humanity.  He loves the baby, and (supervised of course) will sit with her
and occasionally nuzzle her feet.  He will sit on the couch above me as I
hold the baby, and groom my head with his tongue.  He does the same to my
wife, if he isn't in her lap.  He would love to groom the baby too, but that
is a bit much!   
 
So-that is one long introduction!  In all likelihood, we are on the downhill
slope of our time together, but who knows-she is a spunky girl and we've
been lucky to have her for so long.  I'll keep you posted as we go through
the rest of our journey together.  Even though we never met, all of you have
given me so much hope and inspiration.  To those of you who have lost cats,
my deepest condolences--and know that I will continue to send good thoughts
and purrayers, as Alice likes to say, your way.  
 
Peace,
Andy    
                                          
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