Feeding tube in a feline. Why being aggressive saves you one of those 9 lives.

This is Minnie. Her story is a testament to how unfair life can seem, and why you have to believe in miracles..
Minnie and her surgical set up

Perhaps there is some deeply seeded catholic benediction my foreparents bestowed upon me that moves me to do the things I do? In too many cases I find myself inexplicably emotionally invested in my patients care. When the case is a cat with a poor prognosis and a back story fitting for the Hallmark channel I also find myself barging into them. 

For all of my intrusive Dr House desire I have grown increasingly impatient for owners to make up their minds when it comes to their pets direly needed treatments. Finding the way to promote being proactive without scaring them into more treatment paralysis takes conviction, dogged determination, and willingness to participate in the responsibility of every possible outcome.

Seems most clients need more prodding than I do to jump in and change the course it so obvious their cat is headed in. Call it my veterinary ability to forecast medical futures and having seen too many unhappy endings, but living with regret for cases that could have ended differently should time have been on our side, I have become more resolved to not let a patient fail if at all possible. A decade of experience in foretelling the future has reaffirmed that people wait too long to make treatment choices, most especially when it comes to their cats. Parents need to be motivated by death looming at the door. Not the tiny chimes of angelic bells on the horizon, No, people wait until cats are taking their last breath. Waiting in too many cases is letting biology keep its course toward death. DON'T WAIT FOR FATE TO DECIDE! If Mother Nature were to decide for us I would have to find another profession. Medicine and Mother Nature are polar opponents within science.


Cats are special critters. They may have nine lives but they need aggressive care when it comes to the following;

1. Warmth. Young and old cats need to be kept warm. Warmth is attainable only when they have dry fur and adequate muscle mass. Debilitated, diseased, skinny (cachexic) elderly and young cats need help. They need shelter and warmth. If they are unable to stand or walk you must monitor their temperature with a thermometer. They get very cod very fast and when you put them on a heating pad (wrapped in a towel always or it will burn them!) they warm up too fast. They need to be between 100 - 102 Fahrenheit. 

2. Parasite free. Fleas and intestinal worms are small lethal killers when found in great numbers. This idea of knowing that your cat "doesn't have intestinal worms" is not based on any shred of intellect. Unless your vet looks at the feces under the microscope ASSUME they DO have parasites. And, just because I ask you to assume this, please (pleeeease) don't go buy some toxic stuff at the corner store and throw it down your cats gullet without checking with your vet.. that stuff is toxic.. yes, terribly toxic... bleck!

3. Eating. Regardless of the cause (and it is SUPER important to identify the cause) you have to get a cat eating. Any cat not eating for over 48 hours is at great risk of hepatic lipidosis. I don't wait longer than 48 hours to decide what to do about an anorexic cat, I get aggressive, I put in a feeding tube. Kittens (anyone under 4 months old), need to eat every 4-6 hours. If they aren't they need to be seen by a vet immediately. Products like NutriCal, Karosyrup on the gums, or syringe feeding might buy you a few hours,, might,, and hours, not days.


This is Minnie, a middle aged petite all black domestic short hair feline. She had just been adopted by her new family a week ago. When she came to the clinic I was spying on her exam work up. The clinic has 5 supremely wonderful vets. We are an eclectic bunch with our own areas of expertise, strengths, diverse experience and most wonderful sense of camaraderie. We share each others successes, failures, frustration, and hard cases. But, when it comes to cats I always volunteer for the hardest and most bleak cases. Worse of all I want the sickest kittens and the broken bodies. They are my favorite cases to fight for. When I heard her story I was determined to get her case in my hands.. (bet you never knew that the vets arm wrestle over cases?).


Minnie was considered "unadoptable" at the shelter. A label that pretty much assures that only crazy people or rubber neckers will glance at you. Being at a shelter is hard enough for any pet, being labeled "not worthy" is unimaginable. Pity is a powerful motivator. I was enamored with her story, her little fragile broken spirit and two people who could cast aside her Scarlett Letter and love her in spite of the professional warnings.

Minnie had waited 2 years to get adopted and within 1 week she was falling apart. Poetic country song justice was being served. The first appointments of Minnie's new life had cost her family over $500. They were looking at and accepting taking the writing on the wall and giving up... until I stepped in (even if it more closely approximated a 'barging in'). 


Minnie presented to JVC with significant diarrhea. The kind that looks like brown water dripping out the anus. Hard to manage for all involved. Medications were sent home. They had minimal effect.

She returned shortly after for more help. Blood work and x-rays then lead to a diagnosis of a mass in her chest.. typically evidence of cancer. All of the vets converged on her case. It was a caucus of opinions, emotional outbursts, "what-if's?", worst case scenarios, suggestions on how to pitch the findings without costing Minnie her second chance, and managing liability, and expectations. Not to mention the heated debate about what treatment options to actually recommend. The negotiations of what to say, what to do, how to help your patient without condemning the unknown future that lies ahead is some of the most stressful moments of every vets life.

I did not want her new parents to be convinced that she wasn't worth another chance of trying..

In reality we guess waaay more than we should. In the obligation of providing advice we GUESS! Without a lung biopsy that white blob on the radiograph is an unknown. No one knows Minnie's past, there are no x-rays to compare, and further that bleb may not have anything to do with her parents presenting complaint. We saw it because we went looking. Differentiating between "incidental findings" and "life threatening"is something left to more invasive diagnostics that most clients do not pursue.

Vets are supremely confident guessers. Handing down a death sentence is a burden vets take too lightly. In an effort to cover all of our bases and be thorough, and cover our asses we throw around words like "cancer," "expensive diagnostics" and "poor prognosis." In the human field it takes weeks to months and massive numbers of tests before you get a diagnosis. Human medicine is elusive and mysterious and often frustrating becuase people are desperate for answers that are not provided UNTIL the discovery process is complete. It is as it should be. Maintaining pursed lips until we have a definitive answer saves lives. Prognosis? Well, that is only for the brave and the well armed. 

Within another few days she was losing weight and not eating. 

"Great," I thought. "I was so hopeful that maybe her chest mass wasn't something bad? And now she has to prove me wrong?" Ugh!

And still I thought,,, "How could everything unravel like this? How is it statistically possible that she is fine for two years in a shelter and within 1 week she is dying from cancer? Stress can explain the diarrhea. The not eating was the congestion, runny, nose, and sneezing like every other cat from a rescue gets." She fit that scenario much better than the 1 week collapse and cancer affliction.

And so it was settled,, I was going with the more plausible scenario, jumping in, and willing Minnie into finally having her 'happily ever after'.


So I did what I wanted to do. I asked her family to let me try? They wanted a happy ending as much as I did. The financial investment was getting concerning. I see it so often. The bill gets bigger, the answers get shadier, and the prognosis for "full recovery" is more and more in question. I get it. I also get that many vets don't want to make assumptions that certainly could be wrong, and we don't want to scare our clients into giving up. So, our answer? We make a deal. Barter for service. 


"What if I do the feeding tube placement for free?"

Or,

"What if you only pay me if the treatment in successful?" 

Deals, and discounts.. and you and I both put some skin in the game to influence the outcome.

Sometimes sheer will power can make miracles happen.


So Minnie got her feeding tube placed by the Good Samaritan Fund. She also got four days in the hospital to try a whole new set of medications. Me, well, I got to try. The longer I practice the more I am seeking the challenges, the battles between biology and faith. The more I realize that the beauty lies in the struggle. Happy endings take work and effort, they are not supposed to be quick and easy.


Now I am not a surgeon, nor an expert of any species of any kind of veterinary anything, BUT, I do place feeding tubes way before anyone else around me contemplates doing it. Being proactive saves lives. It is why we use preventatives, advocate for yearly examinations, and promote vaccines, examinations, and excellent animal husbandry.

Feeding tubes save lives. They are cheap (tube $5, anesthesia $100, and suture $5, skill about $40).. I also take a radiograph with barium (contrast) to show that I have the tube where I want it to be. When I have the bill in my own hands I take liberties other vets have to scrutinize. Minnie was my case to do as I thought best. I did everything I thought she needed. If your clinic doesn't have an in-house slush fund I urge you to consider why not?


There is the always resistance when I mention  or suggest a feeding tube. We humans relate to medical treatment options as if we are the patient. Your cat is not a human. There are many treatment options that pets seem to tolerate far better than we do. Broken bones, spay/neuter, illness, cancer, you can almost name anything. They often bounce back very quickly and never feel sorry for themselves. Minnie was losing weight and getting sicker, she needed help to maintain her body weight, deliver the medications she needed and have a chance. She needed a feeding tube. She needed it now.


Helpful Real-Life Vet Tip; Don't hesitate to put a feeding tube in a cat. EVER! (OK, I should never say never, or ever,, But I do mostly mean it here).

The myths behind feeding tubes;

1. They are invasive. Not hard to place not difficult to do. A few photos in a training manual and basic surgery skills.

2. They are extra-ordinary life saving measures. Not any more so than an iv catheter and we do this daily.

3. They are hard to manage. They aren't. A few simple instructions and they are a satisfyingly simple life savers..

4. They are cumbersome and bothersome to our patients. of all that I have placed not one cat has seemed to even notice them.



Here are some things to remember about feeding tubes;

1. They are transient short term lifesavers.

2. They permit for adequate food and medication delivery quickly and efficiently.

3. Cats can (and do) eat around them. We let Minnie decide when she was ready to have it removed.

After a few days of hospitalization she started eating very well. We sent her home with a few basic instructions on monitoring the tubes placement site to make sure it wasn't moving, looking infected, or had food caked around it. Feeding requires liquefying one of the many prescription foods and allocating the daily allowance over the 4-8 feedings prescribed. After each meal the tube is cleared by flushing a small amount of water. The tube is capped and tucked away in the neck bandage.

Food and water is offered and kept available at all times.

Most of these cases are given concurrent;

1. Probiotics (after all we are adding a lot of water to liquify the food and lots of water leaves likely diarrhea).

2. Appetite stimulant. I like mirtazapine. The point of Minnie's plan was to get her eating. Use all tricks, tips and tools available.

3. Address and correct Minnie's underlying issues. Feeding tubes buy you a little bit of time but they don't cure. Like all medical procedures we buy bits of time, we continue to search, 




Minnie went home for a few days to acclimate (again),  feeding tube in place. Her parents had a daily list of medications to give, and instructions on how to monitor her feeding tube. The biggest fear I had was pulling her feeding tube too soon. She had to be well enough that she was maintaining her weight, could stay on her prescribed medications, and be comfortable in her new home.



Things that indicate a problem;

1. Cat isn't eating or looking interested in food. A feeding tube can't stay in forever. Start an appetite stimulant, look for additional underlying issues, and don't forget to address behavioral components (a stressed or unhappy cat will not eat).

2. The feeding tube is vomited up, or coughed up and coming  out of the mouth. These cats will chew off the end of the tube and we don't want the tube to be swallowed. 

3. The entry site of the tube needs to be checked daily. We change the bandage that covers it daily. Infection is dealt with aggressively and immediately. 

4. Using a feeding tube takes practice and calculated amounts of the correct prescription food. Your vet needs to help you so that enough calories are given, enough water is used to move the food into the stomach, and a flush of water as a chaser is given after the food is delivered so that the tube doesn't clog.



Minnie has a new second (maybe we are on our third?) chance at life. She is being monitored closely. Given her own spot to acclimate to her new home, and get used to life after the shelter.

And me, well, I've got your back Minnie, and all of us at Jarrettsville Vet are rooting for you!

One week post op.

Many thanks to all of the friends of Jarrettsville Vet who help us provide second chances to those in need. The Good Samaritan Fund is available at the discretion of the staff of Jarrettsville Vet to our clients. If you would like to contribute please contact us here. The veterinarians who utilize the fund are not paid out of it. The vets donate their time if they elect to use the Fund. Everyone (we mean everyone) puts some skin in the game and is personally invested in the case.

If you have questions about anorexia, feeding tubes, hospital care, and how sheer will and determination can shape health and destiny, please find us on Pawbly.com. It is free to use and open to all who care about animals.

You can also find me on Twitter @FreePetAdvice.

And if you have a cat who needs a friend find me at Jarrettsville Vet. I am always looking for a case to champion and a cat who hasn't exhausted their 9 lives.

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