Miss Kit is not very well – and has not been very well for
some time as you all know. Having been away for a fortnight, we came back and
saw her, as one does, with fresh eyes, and reckoned it was time she had a
professional once-over. She’s got so scared by the vet’s after some bad
experiences we got a vet to come and take a look at her here yesterday, to see
what she was like in a normal state and not stressed out of her wits. This was,
unfortunately, not reassuring. It’s possible that she has toxoplasmosis, about
which something might possibly be done (though a long, long, course of
antibiotics had no effect other than upsetting her). It’s also possible that
she has fallen victim to what journalists are calling Robotic Cat Syndrome,
which sounds like a highly hilarious YouTube lolcat post, and isn’t. It’s an
utterly mysterious cat disease which popped up in north-east Scotland around the turn of the millennium: its victims
are rural cats, mature to elderly, living between Inverness and Aberdeen , and its
official description is ‘slowly progressive
lymphohistiocytic meningoencephalomyelitis’. In other words, a slowly
degenerative disease of the brain and nervous system. It’s highly unusual
because by and large, diseases of cat’s brain and nervous system are rapidly
degenerative, viz. about a fortnight from something apparently wrong to the sad
phone call, and Miss Kit hasn’t been right in herself for a year; the problem
with her spine and lower back seems now to be taking a more ominous form. She
shows one of the most characteristic symptoms, which is carrying her tail
rather stiffly straight out, which I put down to damage to her lower back, but
also has the stiff, toddling walk, which is what gives the syndrome its popular
(or unpopular) name, though not currently in an acute form, ears pricked
forward anxiously, and an increased affectionateness of a reassurance-seeking
kind. ‘Mild behavioural
changes and the rigid extension of the tail were the most consistent early
signs of the disease’, say the researchers. I have wondered for a while if she was going blind
because of the way she bumps into twigs and things in the garden, but the vet
thinks this is more probably a degree of mental confusion – i.e. she can see
the twig or whatever it is, but can’t think what to do about it. The important
thing is that it was only clinically described a couple of years ago, and
nobody is anywhere near a cure since it's not clear what is causing it (it seems to be viral but that helps only up to a point). Basically we all live with it till it gets
worse, and she keeps falling over or stops being able to swallow – there’s
nothing wrong with her ability to eat at the moment, but it’s a feature of the
late stages. The common ground between the various victims is that they have
all been cats free to roam outside and hunt, so best guess is that this is
something they have caught from rodents – though of course that simply shifts
the mystery from NE Scottish cats, who are being well observed by concerned
owners, to NE Scottish wild rodents, who aren’t.
Poor Miss Kit. We shall have to be sure not to bring any NE Scottish rodents home to Ginny and Travis this fall.
ReplyDeleteNo indeed. But I am not happy with the idea that you keep cats inside for their protection - they are not tropical birds, but medium sized and capable carnivores. You have to let them be cats, and this place is cat paradise ... but there are no paradises in this world without problems. Urban cats get leukaemia off each other. It turns out Aberdeenshire cats are at risk from a virtually unknown neurological disease. Your own little furry companions perhaps risk Lyme's disease? Life isn't safe, and trying to pack intelligent and curious beasties in cotton wool because you're afraid on their behalf is wrong, I think.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure Miss Kit has had a happy life in her cat paradise.
ReplyDelete