saavedra77: Back to the byte mines ... (reach4)
Anthony Diaz ([personal profile] saavedra77) wrote2008-07-20 12:43 pm
Entry tags:

Foreign Object

About a week ago, my two-year-old cat Ozzy abruptly stopped eating. He'd half-heartedly sniff his food, then shamble away. Kibble was disappearing from the dish, but at a much slower rate than usual, it would seem entirely due to the younger cat's appetite. After a couple of days of this, Ozzy started getting weak and wobbly, and it was clearly time to see the vet.

The problem wasn't immediately clear, based on the first round of tests: everything looked normal, healthy even ... except for a kind of smudge-looking thing on one x-ray, something that didn't look like it should be there. A second round of X-rays confirmed the presence of a "foreign object" in his belly, an obstruction that the vet concluded was inducing a kind of anorexia. And the only sure way of getting it out of there was going to be surgery.

The procedure was completed the following day, successfully extracting a 1.25-inch-long, 0.5-inch wide piece of flat, green plastic or rubber with most of the letters of "MADE IN CHINA" stamped on it:
Foreign Object
So, yeah, my cat apparently likes to eat random chewy plastic stuff. I'd already encountered this with plastic bags and the shower curtain. But seriously, a barely-masticated hunk of medium-hard plastic the size of a stick of gum? Hell, I still can't identify the thing, or say where it came from.

In the days since, Ozzy has returned from the vet clinic, slept a lot, tolerated the frequent pillings and syringes with relative docility, started regaining his appetite, and seems to be more or less on the mend. This is him just two days after surgery:
Ozzy in Recovery
But I'm now feeling extra-paranoid about anything and everything plastic and chewable and/or bite-sized that finds its way into the apartment--in short, frantically working to further "child-proof" the place. Because we are so not going through this again ...

[identity profile] verbicide.livejournal.com 2008-07-20 09:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Henry, my friend Sarah's cat, did the same thing recently. They were able to get him to pass it instead of surgery, but it was a close call. And as he, too, loves to eat and chew random things, Sarah's got to keep a hawk-like eye out.

I'm glad Ozzy is on the mend. He's such a beautiful cat!

[identity profile] saavedra77.livejournal.com 2008-07-21 01:40 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks!

And, yes, he is a handsome devil--sweet disposition, too. :)

[identity profile] jmargethe.livejournal.com 2008-07-20 11:55 pm (UTC)(link)
oh no! poor kitty. i'm glad you caught it!

no clues on the origin of the object...

i once caught luka eating a piece of thread...with a needle at the end of it. i think my heart stopped for a second.

[identity profile] saavedra77.livejournal.com 2008-07-21 01:37 am (UTC)(link)
i once caught luka eating a piece of thread...with a needle at the end of it. i think my heart stopped for a second.

Yikes! Glad you caught THAT! When we were wondering what Ozzy had swallowed, the vet was talking about how much damage string form objects can do to an animal's insides--and that's without a needle.

It's scary how many things you have to protect them from ...

[identity profile] delerium69.livejournal.com 2008-07-25 03:35 am (UTC)(link)
Good heavens, I'm glad they removed it in time without much complication. Poor Ozzy! And it's doubly bad when cats get "anorexic" because they can develop fatty liver disease from not eating very quickly and die from that problem too. That almost happened to my friend's kitty; and they never ended up figuring out what caused her to stop eating. I always worry because Gigi is a "licker" and if she ever licked up something nasty...*shudders*.