The NINE LIVES of Chico Morales
A tale of endurance
By Jon Geller, DVM
I walked into the Morales' barn to visit one of my favorite
patients, Chico, a 15-year old orange short-haired male
cat. Chico had been losing weight for several months, and
drinking more water. His coat was dry and ragged, and he'd
become shockingly thin. This worried me; because changes in
body weight are the most significant indicator of
underlying disease in cats, and I estimated Chico to weigh
no more than six pounds. I scratched his head and lifted
him out of the wheelbarrow where he was crouched like a
roasting turkey, then took Chico inside to get an accurate
weight.
The Moraleses offered me some hot coffee, and I turned to
the torn, coffee-stained folder that contained Chico's
medical records before completing Chico's exam on the
kitchen table. Normally feisty and resistant, Chico didn't
resist my probing. His eyes seemed glazed over as he stared
ahead.
According to his owners, Chico had not eaten anything in
several days, not even the tuna fish and turkey offered in
place of his regular diet. I pushed my fingers behind his
prominent ribs, and could feel two very small, irregular
kidneys.
Chico was in kidney failure, an irreversible and
devastating disease. As toxins build up in the blood
stream, overwhelming nausea causes vomiting and loss of
appetite. Neurotoxins cause disorientation and induce a
comatose-like state. Valuable proteins in the bloodstream
are lost through the kidneys, causing a downward spiral of
weight loss and weakness. It is inhumane to allow any cat
to endure the end stage effects of renal failure.
I stared down at Chico's folder, planning my words
carefully before telling the Morales about his death
sentence. We had all been through a lot together. I perused
his record, amazed at what he had survived:
All kittens should be tested for feline leukemia virus and
FIV, and negative kittens should be vaccinated for feline
leukemia as well as the other three viral diseases.
JUNE, 1986
I first met Chico when he was a four-month-old kitten
living in the barn with his littermates. As I scruffed him
for an exam, I noticed his eyes matted with discharge, his
breathing noisy and congested. His coat was unkempt and
disheveled. Like many barn cats, he had never been
vaccinated.
Unvaccinated cats are susceptible to an array of
life-threatening viral diseases. Calichi virus and
rhinotracheitis primarily affect the upper respiratory
system, and Chico was probably infected with one or both.
Feline panleukopenia, another viral disease of young cats,
is more devastating, it depletes the white-blood cell
supply while causing the intestines to slough their
protective lining. Most cats don't survive.
All three of these diseases can be prevented with a single
combination vaccine, given at 10 and 13 weeks of age. The
vaccine gives a mild form of the disease that stimulates a
protective immune response. (See Preventive Health Program
for the Cat )
Chico was the only kitten in the litter that seemed to be
sick, which made me suspect that his immune system was not
at full strength. I obtained a few drops of blood and used
a simple test kit to check for feline leukemia virus and
Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV). Feline leukemia is
much more common than FIV, and Chico was positive. About
one-third of cats with feline leukemia are able to live
normal, healthy lives, one-third succumb to the disease at
a young age and the remaining third are carriers who may
intermittently become ill.
FIV is the feline corollary for human AIDS/HIV, and is
usually transmitted by bite wounds or from an infected
mother. As with the human counterpart, there is no vaccine
or effective treatment.
All kittens should be tested for feline leukemia virus and
FIV, and negative kittens should be vaccinated for feline
leukemia and as the other three viral diseases. Kittens
that are positive should still be vaccinated for feline
panleukopenia, calichi virus and rhinotracheitis. Any new
cats brought into the household should be tested and
vaccinated for feline leukemia before being exposed to a
feline leukemia positive cat like Chico.
I took Chico back to my clinic for several days of fluids,
antibiotics, and supportive care. For 24 hours things were
touch-and-go, and then Chico improved and never looked
back.
While I was testing and vaccinating the rest of the litter,
I noticed some rice-like particles on the rear end of one
of the females. Tape-worms are common parasites in cats
that eat mice or birds. Although they do not cause serious
disease, tapeworms should be eliminated, which is easily
done with oral medication. Another oral medicine will take
care of roundworms and hookworms. (See Preventive Health
Program for the Cat )
Kittens should receive a rabies vaccination at around 13
weeks, along with boosters of the other two vaccinations.
Although rabies is rare in cats, it is more common than in
dogs because of potential exposure to rabid bats in some
parts of the country.
Some barn cats are quite wild, and must be live-trapped.
Using a squeeze cage, I often sedate young cats so they can
be vaccinated and neutered in one visit. Males can usually
be neutered right on the farm, but females must be
transported to a veterinary hospital for surgery.
SEPTEMBER, 1986
Three months later, I was called back to the Morales' farm.
Chico was limping around, and seemed lethargic. When I
examined him, his temperature was 105.6°F. Lameness
accompanied by fever usually indicate a bite wound, and
with a little probing I found two small puncture wounds on
Chico's right hip.
Untreated, this bite wound from another cat would form an
abscess - a pocket of pus formed when white blood cells
migrate to the wound. Once an abscess forms, the cat should
be sedated and the wound lanced and drained. If bacteria
from the wound gains entry to the blood stream, a cat can
become septic and critically ill.
Because we found Chico's wound early, he could be treated
with antibiotics - an injection reinforced by a liquid oral
medicine mixed in with his food.
Chico recovered well, and I took advantage of my next visit
to neuter him while he was healthy. Neutered males fight
less, as they lose some of their tendencies.
NOVEMBER, 1988
Two years later, I received a frantic call from Mrs.
Morales. Chico was in the barn, vomiting and staggering
around. Mr. Morales has changed the antifreeze in their car
that day, and Chico had probably ingested some of the
sweet-tasting ethylene glycol.
Antifreeze toxicity is truly a life-threatening emergency.
Initially, the alcohol derivative causes signs similar to
drunkenness. Once metabolized by the body, byproducts
crystallize in the kid ney, causing severe kidney failure
and death, usually within 24 to 48 hours. The only
treatment in cats is intravenous alcohol, which displaces
the ethylene glycol from its binding sites and allows the
toxin to be excreted.
I took Chico back to the clinic and started him on I.V.
fluids with an appropriate dose of grain alcohol. Two days
later, despite the grave prognosis, Chico recovered. He was
a survivor.
Cats must not have access to antifreeze and concrete
surfaces (garage floors and driveways) where cars are
parked. A mere 2 to 3 teaspoons can be fatal. When exposure
is suspected, aggressive treatment must begin within 12 to
24 hours to be effective. There are antifreeze solutions
now available that use a non-toxic glycol derivative.
Outside cats live a risky life. The average outside cat
lives to three years of age, while inside cat can be
expected live 12 to 15 years, or more.
OCTOBER, 1990
Several years later, I got a strange call from Mr. Morales.
"Chico is yellow!" he yelled over the phone. "I'll be right
there," I replied. "What now?" I thought. "What else could
this cat have gotten into?"
Chico was laid out on the kitchen table and his skin was
quite yellow. He obviously did not feel well, because he
didn't even respond when I scratched his back the way he
usually liked. A yellow cat has jaundice, the result of the
breakdown of red blood cells. Chico's immune system was
destroying his own red blood cells.
Once again I took Chico back to the clinic (an increasingly
familiar trip) for testing and supportive care while I
tried to sort things out. Chico had a very low red blood
cell count, due to the ongoing destruction, which accounted
for his weakness.
As I peered at a slide of his blood cells, I saw blue dots
on the surface of the red blood cells. Chico's blood had
been attacked by an internal parasite called
hemobartonella. He probably had gotten it from a bite wound
from another cat; because of his feline leukemia, he was
more susceptible to infection. His immune system was
chugging along at full speed now, though - destroying red
blood cells faster than his bone marrow could replace them.
Chico needed antibiotics and a blood transfusion, so I
borrowed one of the Morales' cats as a donor. Chico
responded well, after several days he was back on the farm,
ready for a new adventure.
JUNE, 1993
Cars and cats can be a bad combination, as Chico
discovered. The Moraleses found him near the gravel road
that ran past their farm. He was unable to walk, but seemed
mentally alert. Apparently, he had been hit a glancing blow
in the rear end.
I gave Chico a good dose of morphine and took him back to
the clinic. X-rays showed he had a ruptured bladder and a
fractured pelvis. Chico was anesthetized and his bladder
repaired, but his pelvis was so shattered that repair was
not practical. I could only let nature take its course and
hope for the best.
After six weeks of confinement and pain medications, Chico
was ready to venture out. He walked with a wobble and a
sway, but walk he did. We all figured the injury would slow
Chico down, and the Morales were optimistic that more of
their hard-earned income could cover something other than
vet bills.
AUGUST 1993
It was only a couple of months before Chico found more
trouble. The family found him bleeding from several gaping
wounds on his flank and chest, probably the result of an
encounter with a bullying dog taking advantage of Chico's
handicap. Miraculously, none of the wounds had penetrated
his chest or abdomen. Somehow, Chico escaped before the
injuries became fatal. A little patchwork, IV fluids and
antibiotics put the old boy back together again. Outside
cats live a risky life. The average outside cat lives to
three years of age, while an inside cat can be expected to
live 12 to 15 years, or more. Chico was defying the odds.
OCTOBER 1990
Mr. and Mrs. Morales decided to give Chico a new setup in
the garage attached to their house. They had long since
discontinued using toxic antifreeze, and in fact rarely
drove the vintage Willys jeep parked in the garage. Chico
had a comfy cat bed with catnip mice and an unlimited food
supply.
The spaces above garage doors are cat magnets; one day
Chico got caught up after the Morales installed an
automatic opener. Chico yowled convincingly enough to be
heard before the door crushed him to death, but not before
incurring some injury.
Chico's spine had been damaged, and he was paralyzed. I
figured this was the end, and mentally lit a few prayer
candles. After three days of treatment and I-V steroids,
Chico wobbled and swayed out of his cage, meowing for food.
The cat was back.
DECEMBER 1998
After the garage-door incident, Chico moved into the house,
where he was enthusiastically spoiled. Mrs. Morales loved
to babysit her new granddaughter, and Chico would often sit
nearby. One day, Mrs. Morales gave Chico a jar of leftover
Gerber's beef baby food. Several hours later, he collapsed.
I rushed to their farm, and took a small blood sample. The
blood had a brown tinge, a clue that Chico was suffering
from methoglobinemia, most likely from onions in the baby
food. Onions and Tylenol (acetaminophen) cause a fatal
change to the hemoglobin in a cat's blood so that it can
not carry oxygen.
Fortunately, there is an antidote, and Chico recovered.
Back to the good life.
THE GOODBYE
I placed a catheter in Chico's front leg while Mrs. Morales
held him. She stroked him along his back while murmuring to
him in Spanish. Mr. Morales had a harder time accepting
Chico's fate, and went outside to distract himself with
some work.
When Mr. Morales came back, it was time. I injected the
euthanising solution into Chico's bloodstream, taking the
life he had so miraculously and tenaciously etched out.
"Good-bye, Chico Morales," I said as he slumped. "Thank you
for allowing me to help you, and for everything you taught
me." As I headed out to my truck, I could hear Mr. Morales
swinging his pick, carving a rectangular hole in the
thawing spring soil.
Preventive Health Program for the cat
VACCINATIONS AND SCREENING TESTS
At 10 weeks of age:
-Feline leukemia and FIV test
-Combination vaccination for feline viral rhinotracheitis,
calichi virus, and pan leukopenia
-Feline leukemia vaccination
At 13 weeks of age:
-Repeat combination vaccination (known as FVRCP)
-Repeat feline leukemia vaccination
-One-year rabies vaccination
At one year of age:
-Combination vaccine booster (FVRCP)
-Feline leukemia booster
-Three-year rabies vaccination
At four years of age, and every three years after
that:
- Repeat vaccination booster done at one year of age
DEWORMING
At 3, 6, 10 and 13 weeks:
-Oral roundworm and hookworm medication (Pyrantel
palmoate), dosed by weight
At 16 weeks, and then every 3 to 6 months:
-Tapeworm medication (Praziquantel), dosed by weight
NEUTERING/SPAYING
At 3 to 6 months of age:
- Especially males, to prevent wandering and marking
behavior
-Healthy female barn cats with good temperments can be used
for breeding. Keep in mind that the gestation period for
kittens is less than two months, so numbers of kittens can
multiply explosively.
NUTRITION
- Most cats do very well with a high-quality, name brand
dry diet.
- Cats that are prone to the formation of crystals in their
urine leading to urinary blockage should be a special diet
that is pH controlled. Consult with your
veterinarian.
- Long-haired cats that groom excessively may be prone to
hair balls and gagging. A new "Hair-Ball Prevention" diet
is available. Cats that are prone to constipation will also
benefit.
- Canned food should be avoided due to the negative
long-term effects on dental health. Several diets are
available with an abrasive texture that helps clean tartar
off of teeth.
*Any cat that lives strictly indoors will have
decreased need for vaccinations and deworming. Consult with
your veterinarian for an appropriate plan.
OTHER SERIOUS DISEASES OF THECAT,
AND SIGNS TO WATCH FOR:
Urinary blockage in male cats
-Not urinating
-Hiding out, lethargic
Diabetes
-Drinking and eating excessively
-Weight loss
Saddle thrombus (blood clot in the
aorta)
-Down in the back end
-Very pained
Rodenticide toxicity (De-Con, other rodent
poisons)
-Very lethargic
-pale gums
Fatty liver disease
-Yellow tint to skin, jaundiced
-Loss of appetite
-Weight loss
Linear foreign body (swallowed string, for
example)
-Vomiting
-Lethargy