RIP: Jinx

Dec. 4th, 2013 08:00 pm
gerisullivan: (Indian Pipe)
Tillie_and_RIP: Jinx_2013-12-04

I'm writing with the very sad news that I took Jinx to the vet this afternoon and Dr. Johnson confirmed what I feared, that Jinx was in the process of dying. I stayed with her while the vet first gave her a sedative (which she barely needed), then did the kind thing and gave her an IV injection that ended the process rather than letting it drag on for another few hours or days. It was all very gentle and quiet, and, yes, teary-eyed all around. After it was over, the tech who had done the initial intake wrapped Jinx's body in a soft red blanket. I think I appreciated that most of all. Very caring and loving, and not at all clinical.

I took the photo this morning. Jinx is on the right, with the little bit of white fluff on her chest. You might be able to see the signs of liver failure in the yellowed skin in the thin spot above her right eye and also the inner part of her ear. Dr. Johnson said the surface of her liver felt consistent with what happens with FIP -- feline infectious peritonitis. That's also consistent with the weight loss she's been experiencing, though, as Dr. Johnson said, this final decline was really quite sudden. We did lab work on her in July after she was continuing to lose weight despite getting as many supplemental feedings of yummy canned food as she wanted. At that time, her lab results were all fine and while she was skinny, she was still tearing around the house when she and Tillie would get into it, gleefully pouncing on the laser pointer, and otherwise acting like a healthy cat with a delicate digestive system. In July, she weighed 8.4 pounds; today she weighed just 7 pounds. That's a bit less than half the 14.2 pounds she weighed in at when I first took her and Tillie to the vet in October, 2011.

In retrospect, I can see she'd been going downhill faster over the past 6 weeks, but at the time, it just seemed like more of the same problems she'd been struggling with for awhile. Problems that might have been easily explained as hairballs, but weren't...as I found out for certain today.

And, from the Cornell Feline Health Center:

What are the symptoms of FIP?

Cats that have been initially exposed to the feline coronavirus usually show no obvious symptoms. Some cats may show mild upper respiratory symptoms such as sneezing, watery eyes, and nasal discharge. Other cats may experience a mild intestinal disease and show symptoms such as diarrhea. Only a small percentage of cats that are exposed to the feline coronavirus develop FIP-and this can occur weeks, months, or even years after initial exposure.

In cats that develop FIP, the symptoms can appear to be sudden since cats have an amazing ability to mask disease until they are in a crisis state. Once symptoms develop, often there is increasing severity over the course of several weeks, ending in death. Generally, these cats first develop nonspecific symptoms such as loss of appetite, weight loss, depression, rough hair coat, and fever.

I don't know that Daddy would have taken her to his vet if he'd still been here to see the signs. Maybe, or maybe he would have done what I did before today's appointment, holding her close, comforting her, and just stroking her gently, gently until she was gone. I do know he wouldn't have spent hundreds or thousands of dollars on tests trying to figure it out earlier, and I'm glad I stopped after the first couple hundred dollars for the tests this summer. The vet advised that, too, at the time, and today he was very clear, telling me he didn't need to run a bunch of tests to know what his eyes and fingers were telling him. I don't begrudge today's $113, much as I'm old enough myself to croggle at what such things cost. The professional confirmation and additional information about what my own eyes were telling me was a comfort, and it was a comfort (though a hard comfort) to help ease her on her way.

I'm feeling some guilt for not taking her in sooner instead of just trying the hairball remedy that had temporarily helped her through past digestive problems. I don't really have a sense of what these last few weeks have been like for her. I know she slowed down a lot, and spent more time in the corner where the two baseboard radiators meet here in my office. In many ways, she followed her usual habits -- avoiding me whenever it looked like I might be thinking about picking her up, but coming to sleep on her pillow or even climb on top of me once I'd gone to bed. I knew things were bad when she let me pick her up without objection Monday night and then settled onto my chest for petting after I found her on her favorite chair in the basement toy room. Even then, she climbed two flights of stairs from the basement and jumped up on the bed on her own that night. Last night, I carried her up with me. When she was healthy, she never, ever would have tolerated that, let alone seem to find comfort in it.

So sad.

Lots of other news du jour, too. Sleep study results, major car repairs. But tonight, I'm going to mourn Jinx's death and spend some extra time with Tillie.
gerisullivan: (Frog on Rock)
1) Skin'n'bones Jinx is happily eating food with salmon oil added to it. Early signs are this is successfully dealing with the hairball issue. She doesn't feel like she's gaining weight, but she continues to act healthy and she's barely barfing at all, so I hold onto hope as I continue coaxing her with luxurious canned food.

2) Continuing on the cat front, they have both been demonstrating what mighty hunters they are of late. Tillie showed up at the patio door with a small bird in her mouth. Jinx seems to have taken that as a challenge and showed up in the same spot two day later with a bird nearly three times the size. Not to be outdone by her daughter, Tub o'Tillie bagged a chipmunk a few days after that. The mighty hunters of course want to parade their prey around inside. I've learned to check their mouths before opening the screen to let them in. If they catch it inside, they're allowed to gloat inside. But their outdoor kills can stay right there. Tillie continues her utterly adorable habit of picking up a catnip mouse and parading around the house loudly meowing what a mighty hunter she is before dropping the mouse somewhere near me.

3) Susan and Gavi expect to arrive here at Toad Woods this Friday afternoon (whee!), giving us a couple of weeks together (triple whee!) before Gavi moves back to Smith for her Junior (Yowser! Junior!) Year. (How the heck did that happen? She's wondering the same....) After Susan heads west, I'll have about six days before Jack shows up from Chicago for the September Brimfield show and the New England Carnival Glass Association's annual convention in Leominster.

4) Three days after Jack leaves (unless he decides to stay for it), the 23rd First Annual Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony takes place on Thursday, September 12, at Sanders Theatre, Harvard University, in Cambridge, MA. Big fun in person (do come if you can!) and also from the comfort of computers everywhere via the live webcast. Details of the 2013 ceremony and, if you'd like a sense of what to expect, or just a warm-up while waiting for 6pm September 12th, here's the video of the 22nd First Annual Ceremony last year:



5) So, yes, lots of socializing these next 5 weeks. All during a busy work time, of course, but that does tend to be how these things go....

6) I've been approved for a streamlined HARP refinancing of my mortgage at a welcome, lower interest rate (while also knocking a year off the length). Closing is scheduled for Thursday afternoon. Fingers crossed all goes as smoothly as it has so far!

7) Training for the upcoming social whirl has included two recent BBQs with friends, one with an added pool party thrown in. Also, a sunny afternoon with Ben at Citi Field enjoying the Mets beating the Phillies 5-0, with all of the scoring thanks to 3 home runs. Fun. And a rainy evening with [livejournal.com profile] debgeisler and [livejournal.com profile] benveniste at LeLacheur Park waiting for the last of the Jack Kerouac bobbleheads, then bailing instead of waiting another sodden hour to learn the game was cancelled due to rain. Also fun.

8) Things have been going well on several fronts, including my return to knitting. Once I add two short sleeves, two pockets, and three buttons to a dress for my great-neice, it will be ready to send her way. It's pretty certain to get there before she outgrows it.

9) Still ahead: moving from my current (old and failing) laptop to a shiny, newer, refurbished laptop ('cause I love, love, love the 17" screen on the MacBook Pro). Alas, moving to a current OS means moving away from Eudora, the email program I've used ever since I had my own email account. Arrrgh. I dread this. I know many have gone before me, carving the path and leaving lots of info and advice in their wake, but I utterly dread this. It's time to do it anyway. So, yeah, [livejournal.com profile] minnehaha K., it's not that I went ahead without learning from your experience, it's that my powers of procrastination are mighty.

10 and final) After living here a mere nine years and trying five different hair stylists interspersed with cuts by Brenda Wodnick at Zina's every time I made it to Minneapolis, I landed with Massachusetts stylist #6 for the win. My hair looked great at Corflu thanks to Krissi at Jeffrey Robert Salon in Sturbridge, and I have my third appointment with her Wednesday afternoon. I was with two of those previous five stylists for longer than I've been with Krissi, but only twice before in my life have I been as happy with my stylist as I am with her. Brenda (~1992-on) and Jimmy (back in the early- and mid-1980s). So, yeah, one more piece of ongoing satisfaction and happiness worked out. Whew.

Onward!

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