warning: cats can cause sleeplessness

As some of you may recall, Bada is on long term medication for severe gingivitis. We changed vets recently (as our beloved Judith had retired) and have started using the one in the village.
She advised us that a long term steroid injection might be better for Bada than a pill regime, which distresses her (and us), so we tried it. Pete took her back to see the vet on Monday, as we were coming to the end of the injection's advised period, and was told that "she was a little bit inflamed, but we don't need another one yet". They charged us thirty quid for this, I might add.
Last Thurday afternoon, Liessa started coughing; of course, it got worse as the evening drew in, and we resolved to en-vet her the following morning. But soon after 8.30 she started clawing at her face, and coughed up some blood, so I phoned the emergency vet on Zetland Road.
The 24 hour vet hospital is part of the group practice of the vet we used to go to; they did her dental op last year, and they have access to her notes. It's clear the vet wasn't impressed with the treatment she'd been having at the new vet, and says the pills are much much better, as they are a controlled dose (which makes sense). Her gums had deteriorated to the point that she had a flap of them hanging off (poor little kit), which was causing the distress and the bleeding.
She had an antibiotic shot and a short term steroid jab - none of us wanted to traumatise her further with a pill last night, so we started those on Friday evening. We also have some dental paste which we can try putting on her paws, in the hope she'll lick it off, and an antibacterial mouth spray (I can't wait/ to try that ...)
£118 for that little lot, which I thought wasn't actually too bad, given they had to get the vet in to see her.
She spent Thursday and Friday night, and all of Friday and Saturday, curled up at the end of our bed. She spent Saturday night curled up between us. She coughs a lot with the infection, but it's not too bad. However, we didn't want to leave her for too long, so we cancelled Saturday night's outing.
She spent *last* night perched on
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Cost to date: £508 (to include a couple of visits I didn't document).
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I know from personal (cat) experience how tricky chronic gingivitis is. P takes her 1/2 tablet wrapped in a piece of boiled chicken which seems to trick her sufficiently. When her mouth gets so bad she stops eating, though, there's nothing I can do.
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I'm really not very pleased with the vet - they asked Pete whether he thought she needed another jab, but he was guided by them; he's not qualified to say, that's why he *took* her to the vet. I'm quite alarmed at how fast she deteriorated, too.
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I think I would query the bill if you had been asked to decide on your cat's medication. That's the vet's job.
It sounds as though the first vet is probably a better bet, of course, I daresay it's far more inconvenient to visit them, but that's Life, isn't it?.
My poor Phoebe had to lose a tooth owing to gum disease, but made a complete recovery. It was very worrying at the time because the poor baby had a fit after we brought her home from surgery. I don't think I got any sleep that night, either.
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As she got older, she lost her sense of smell, so putting pills in food wasn't a problem. When she was younger she was suspicious as well.
I hope all works out. Poor kitty. It does my heart good to see good kitty parents out there.
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Judith's replacement is ok - it's just that the village vet is walkable, and so more convenient. The cats' welfare is far more important, however, so we'll return to Hotwell Road.
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Adam is the resident cat piller at our house. I wish I could come up with a reliable way to adminster drugs via their catnip mice.