• Digestive_Biscuit@feddit.ukEnglish
    39·
    26 days ago

    A friend of mine had a cat which had kittens. It was a few weeks when he realised, after watching one try to take a dump and fail, it didn’t have an opening for it’s anus. He said it was bloated and abdomen was hard. The vet said they had only heard of this and never witnessed it themselves. Thing had to be put down.

    • Frigidlollipop@lemmy.worldEnglish
      21·
      26 days ago

      It’s often fixable if caught soon enough. Basically the affected creature gets ripped a new asshole under anasthesia.

      • Digestive_Biscuit@feddit.ukEnglish
        10·
        26 days ago

        Yes the vet said it’s probably treatable but she couldn’t do it. She’d have to refer him to some other vet and it would have been insanely expensive.

    • otter@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish
      211·
      26 days ago

      jesusfuck, man.

      That’s one of those anecdotes that you don’t ever have to share again. Let it die.

      • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.worldEnglish
        3·
        26 days ago

        Seconded. My little brother gets NeedsToGoToTheHospital-Grade stopped up from time to time and, uh, it’s painful enough they give you the good shit. That is a horrible way to die.

        A few weeks? I need a hug dude. It must’ve been vomiting it’s stool.

    • buddascrayon@lemmy.worldEnglish
      16·
      26 days ago

      99% of the time, a swollen hard belly on a kitten means it’s infested with worms though.

      • Digestive_Biscuit@feddit.ukEnglish
        3·
        25 days ago

        It is treatable, and financially? I don’t know this is worse or better than what I said.

        • buddascrayon@lemmy.worldEnglish
          2·
          24 days ago

          There’s deworming product you can buy, it’s not expensive and it’s pretty standard. It’s something you feed them with a feeding syringe. The worst part about it is cleaning up the mess in the litterbox cause the whole process gives em the runs pretty bad. But it’s over within a week or so.

    • Drusas@fedia.io
      7·
      26 days ago

      Can happen to humans, too, but it’s frowned upon to put those ones down.

  • AeronMelon@lemmy.worldEnglish
    25·
    26 days ago

    It looks like the cat is being shamed for getting into the soup again.

    • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldEnglish
      9·
      26 days ago

      I work with a lot of feral kittens. When I see a firm belly we start treating for worms immediately.

        • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldEnglish
          3·
          26 days ago

          My area is blissfully free of FIP. FIV on the other hand.

          This is Frasier. He and his brother were seven weeks old when they came in Niles was happily adopted about a week ago from a cat cafe. Frazier however tested positive for FIV. Two kids from the same mom that should have had pretty much identical life circumstances up to that point. We waited a month and tested them both again just to make sure there wasn’t a false positive from was still carrying some antibodies from Mom… still FIV. So it’s taken us a bit of time to find a rescue adoption that will take an FIV+ kid. He is scheduled to leave in the middle of next month.

        • aeiou@piefed.socialEnglish
          2·
          25 days ago

          I’m thankful there’s finally a treatment for that