The vet is now closed, and I thought the Internet might help answer my query.
Here's the what the deal is:
I have a young female feline. I'm thinking less than two years old. She's been fixed. I stay on top of her shots.
In the past couple of days, she's become lethargic, shallow, quick breathing, won't eat, drink, do her business, basically won't even move.
I took her to the Vet. Some XRays were taken. She has white spots all through her lungs. Had some tests done, and some samples were sent off to the lab, or wherever.
The Veterinarian said it might be one of four possibilities: Cancer, heart worms, fungal infection, or a parasite. The last two are treatable, while the first two, at least in my case for cancer, are not. Let's hope for the best!
Well, I was just reminded that she sneezes a lot, and I mean fairly regularly. So much so that I just realized I've come accustomed to it until someone pointed it out. I have another cat that never sneezes.
Does this help with the diagnosis at all? Does it possibly mean something?
Here's the what the deal is:
I have a young female feline. I'm thinking less than two years old. She's been fixed. I stay on top of her shots.
In the past couple of days, she's become lethargic, shallow, quick breathing, won't eat, drink, do her business, basically won't even move.
I took her to the Vet. Some XRays were taken. She has white spots all through her lungs. Had some tests done, and some samples were sent off to the lab, or wherever.
The Veterinarian said it might be one of four possibilities: Cancer, heart worms, fungal infection, or a parasite. The last two are treatable, while the first two, at least in my case for cancer, are not. Let's hope for the best!
Well, I was just reminded that she sneezes a lot, and I mean fairly regularly. So much so that I just realized I've come accustomed to it until someone pointed it out. I have another cat that never sneezes.
Does this help with the diagnosis at all? Does it possibly mean something?