English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

We have been to the vet several times, and I had to put a salve in her eye twice a day for two weeks, and that didn't help. Next, we tried eye drops four times a day. Those didn't help either. Her actual eye is fine, but the lid above and next to her eye is very swollen. Does anyone have any ideas what could be causing this?

2006-07-27 12:46:34 · 12 answers · asked by wonder_nica 1 in Pets Cats

12 answers

It could be anything from an eye infection to a bug bite to an allergic reaction to something she ate or touched. If it is a bug bite or allegic reaction sometimes an antihistimine like benedryl will help quell the negative reaction. I would consult your vet, or if they seem unable to find the cause, go to another vet, maybe one who specializes in allergies. if it were an infection, the eye drops should have helped.
I would definetly consult a vet before giving her benedryl though, since it can aggrivate certain medical conditions like heart problems and hyperactive thyroids or could react to other medications she may be taking. No more than a 1/4 pill to start with, which is what my tortie with a food allergy has to take. Good luck.

2006-07-27 12:58:27 · answer #1 · answered by jennysweetheat 3 · 1 0

My cats had something quite like that too. I ended up going to the vet with them. I tried eye drops but for some cats it worked, for some others, not. Sometimes you have to try another kind of eye drops. maybe your cat's got 'cat flu' Does it eats normally? Does it sneeze or produces a lot of mucus from the nose?

Best thing, consult the vet.

2006-07-27 13:10:11 · answer #2 · answered by valy_4 4 · 0 0

Sounds like an infection. Go back to the vet, or get an opinion from a different vet. Do not give any medication that has not been recommended by a vet. Remedies for people are not necessarily good for animals. I mean, we wouldn't give ourselves horse medicine (well, some of us wouldn't), so don't give an animal anything that has not been approved by a vet.

2006-07-27 13:52:46 · answer #3 · answered by LaRue 4 · 0 0

i agree with the previous post. if, after six weeks, your vet has failed to diagnose anything and your cat's eye problem persists, you need to seek a second, third or fourth opinion. even if her eye is fine, it's very possible that a secondary infection can occur spontaneously, especially if it is a boil, cyst or bacteria-laden blister. worst case scenario: she will have to have surgery to remove or lance whatever it is that is making her eyelid swell. i had a cat who had a swelling on his nose. at first the vet didn't know what it was. when his health started to fail, we finally found out that it was a symptom of the feline leukemia he had acquired from another cat during a fight. sounds like the vet you've seen isn't exactly doing much good.

2006-07-27 12:59:20 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Could there be something in it that's too far back to easily see?

Could be that it's an insect bite and she's scratching at it when you're not looking so it's just getting inflamed again and again...

I'd get a second opinion. Talk to other cat people you know in your area - friends, family, etc. See who they use and what they think of them. At this point, I think that's your best option.

There are too many things that it could potentially be something in there that isn't easy to see, allergies, etc. I'd see about the 2nd opinion.

2006-07-27 13:00:15 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Marijuana is amazingly volatile to cats, and likely, even the smoke might reason issues. certainly be greater careful interior the destiny to not smoke marijuana interior the presence of your cat. Make certainly advantageous your save your drugs properly out of kitty's attain to boot. Cats at the instant are and returned tempted to bite on issues they might desire to not, and marijuana ingestion could have deadly consequences. on condition that the cat grew to become into large for each week, this is probable not the source of the attention subject. do not wait, and take him on your huge-unfold vet interior the morning. The eyes are rather comfortable or perhaps what sounds like a minor subject can get very extreme very immediately. you do not desire state of being inactive on your section to effect in everlasting harm or resourceful and prescient loss.

2016-12-10 16:01:54 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

a spider or a biting bug has probally bit the cat on the eye lid were its swollen or she is allergic to something

2006-07-27 12:51:52 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

She may have ingrown hairs on her eyelids that are causing the problem....surprised your vet didn't mention it....maybe he/she wants a few extra $$$? Take her to another vet for a 2nd opinion...

2006-07-27 13:02:24 · answer #8 · answered by sweet ivy lyn 5 · 0 0

if it has cold in it give her a warm bath. make sure its nice and steamy in there too it helped my cat .. same problem but if no cold in her eyes its probably irritated call teh vet and ask they will give u info

2006-07-27 12:56:31 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

get a second opinion!! could have been an insect bite or something to that effect.

2006-07-27 12:51:13 · answer #10 · answered by tinaluvsglass 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers