text/html; charset=UTF-8: Unrecognized
___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
Hi Margo,
Thanks for this info. I apologize, but he could have been sedated, I'm not sure
of the difference so I could be mistaken in my description. We were able to
'wake' him afterward but he was very groggy for a good part of the night.
I'll ask about these drugs. I'm also gonna take him
I have given it to several of my cats from time to time (Clindanycin). I
didn't know it was bad tasting. My cats tolerated it very well. And with
mouth sores, I administer it on the side of the mouth with the sore.
When cats have mouth sores, a liquid works better than pills. It hurts
less to
praying fro Schmoo
On Sat, Dec 21, 2013 at 6:24 PM, Katherine K. wrote:
We tapped Shmoo's lungs last night for fluid. Drew out about 90ml
total. He
had a rough night coming off the anesthesia but was better this
morning.
Still a little labored in breathing but not as bad as before the
Pookie had his mouth sore on the side down next to his tongue. The vet
saw it. I didn't. They won't let you look becasue it hurts for them to
open the
On Sat, Dec 21, 2013 at 6:27 PM, Jill Eisenbraun wrote:
Hi Jen, stomatitis isn't limited to older cats at all! It can have
many causes, but
I can attest to it's truly foul taste, but YMMV. I tend to avoid anything but
buprenorphine near a lesion, so use the opposite side, but can't cite anything
that supports that action. Just seems that a sore mouth would be most painful
if opened near the source of pain, but again, just my
6 matches
Mail list logo