So, in the roller coaster of news concerning my cat, she started having labored breathing with a kind of rattley sound last night and, concerned, Sharon ran her back in at about 3 am. First they found that she had fluid in her lungs and later, after having confined her to an oxygen tent and running myriad tests, determined she is experiencing congestive heart failure; probably due to the physiological stress her body has undergone over the past few days.
She's responding to some treatment they're giving her in order to relieve the lung fluid, but it remains to be seen how she will respond to heart medication. She could live from a few days to a couple of years, depending on how manageable is the condition. Looking back, we can't see a single point where we've misstepped in terms of getting her treated. Nevertheless, we're once again faced with a pet that's experiencing an insanely unfair and untimely set of life-shortening health issues. The omnipresent realization, also, is that we're into this a dollar amount which, like the national deficit, has exceeded our capacity to even plan paying, and is into the realm of numbers better wrangled by astronomers and geologists.
What we're wishing for at this point is that she can return home at least be with us until she has the chance to heal from the discomfort of her surgery and be able to have a period of leisure & relaxation before the end.
Of course, that is trusting to hope, which has long since forsaken these lands.
Saturday, February 25, 2006
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8 comments:
Good grief.
Best wishes, of course.
My sentiments, as well.
Thanks. Crazy, fucked-up two weeks.
Stephen, you might not be getting your first dose of me in a totally normal mental state. Though I'm pretty much always prone to fits of frenetic oddness, I suppose...
Well, the beauty of blogging is that, with everything in archives, I can get a highly-detailed catch-up without asking a million annoying questions. At least not now. Maybe later.
So sad to hear of that news. I pray that your time with her is longer than anyone expects.
Thanksa, man.
Also thanks for the empathy, even as it is a given that you can't totally relate.
Stephen: I love a million annoying questions, because it means I get to give a million annoying answers.
Lord help us all.
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