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I have a male, nuetered, 8 year old cat. He is known to get into scuffles with other cats in the neighborhood. He has never gotten an abcess from any cat bite... Recently we have been finding burst abcesses under his armpit, any takes on this? The vet said he really doesnt know the cause that it "happened". Im not so sure Second opinion please? Lol

2006-11-02 12:06:54 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Cats

7 answers

Test for FIV. I have seen several cats that had armpit abcesses that really didn't heal and they ALL ended up being FIV positive.

2006-11-02 12:10:30 · answer #1 · answered by ARE YOUR NEWFS GELLIN'? 7 · 0 0

An abcess is caused by an open wound of any type. You may NEVER know exactly what happened. If he is an outdoor cat he could have gotten hung up on a fence or something. As long as you took it to the vet and treated it I woudln't worry unless it happens more often. Then you may be looking at some sort of infection in an organ etc.

2006-11-02 13:00:43 · answer #2 · answered by leftygirl_75 6 · 0 0

Cat bites turning into an abscess is all too common. The best prevention is to not let the cat outside. Cat fights spread disease like feline leukemia (FeLV) and feline immunodeficiency (FIV) virus, Bartonellosis, and rabies. Some of these, such as Bartonellosis and rabies, have zoonotic potential – they are transmissible to humans.

If he MUST continue to go outside, have him checked for FeLV and FIV. Have the vet re-do the test again in 90 days to be sure it is still negative and have him vaccinated. The healthiest cat is an indoor cat.

Good luck. If he comes up positive for either disease, that could be why he is getting more abscesses, since both diseases weaken the immune system.

2006-11-02 12:25:17 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

His muddle field could no longer be sparkling adequate for his liking. Cats are very particular approximately the place they do their organization. shop the field sparkling, dont replace muddle manufacturers by surprise, shop the muddle field in a quiet place and shop it sparkling each and all the time. Scoop as many times as a possibility, a minimum of daily, and alter it as quickly as a week. once you sparkling the packing boxes use antibacterial dishsoap and a rest room brush. Dont use bleach or something like that. you're able to no longer be waiting to sniff it after yet your cat particular will.

2016-10-03 05:37:17 · answer #4 · answered by cosco 4 · 0 0

My cat had an abscess on his belly that the vet took a sample from and it turned out to be a staph infection. He wouldn't take pills so the vet gave him shots for it.

2006-11-02 12:18:13 · answer #5 · answered by I love winter 7 · 0 0

Im not sure what exactly causes this to happen, but my cat use to go out and get into fits with neighborhood cats and he would get those abscesses on him too. A thing that I found would work was peroxide (if it was already popped) and that was good to take the infection away. Im sorry I can't tell you more.

2006-11-02 12:15:01 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

2 pts 4 me!

2006-11-02 12:47:19 · answer #7 · answered by ♥Chickie♥ 1 · 0 2

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