Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
Thanks.
CatNipped - 05 Jan 2006 16:36 GMT
Get well purrs on the way for Eli.

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Hugs,
CatNipped
See all my masters at: http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/
> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
> Thanks.
Adrian - 05 Jan 2006 17:00 GMT
> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
> Thanks.
Get well purrs for Eli.

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Adrian (Owned by Snoopy and Bagheera)
A House is not a home, without a cat.
http://community.webshots.com/user/clowderuk
Yoj - 05 Jan 2006 19:10 GMT
Purrs for Eli are on the way.

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Joy
**Don't believe everything you think**
> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
> Thanks.
Charleen Welton - 05 Jan 2006 21:17 GMT
>> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
>> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>>
>> Thanks.
Many "go away sniffes and sneezes" purrs for Eli.
Charleen
Mr. Pumpkin
Aggie Marble
Victor Velcro
polonca12000 - 05 Jan 2006 21:45 GMT
Lots and lots of purrs and best wishes for Eli to be ok tomorrow,
Polonca and Soncek
> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
> Thanks.
Sam Nash - 05 Jan 2006 23:58 GMT
> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
> Thanks.
Purrs on the way for the little feller to feel better.
Sam, closely supervised by Mistletoe
Cheryl - 06 Jan 2006 01:44 GMT
> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
> Thanks.
Purrs for Eli to feel better soon. Could he have something stuck in
his nose? Are his eyes running?

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Cheryl
Pat - 06 Jan 2006 01:51 GMT
> Purrs for Eli to feel better soon. Could he have something stuck in
> his nose? Are his eyes running?
His eyes aren't running but his nose is stuffed up and he's breathing with
his mouth open.
Cheryl - 06 Jan 2006 02:03 GMT
>> Purrs for Eli to feel better soon. Could he have something
>> stuck in his nose? Are his eyes running?
>
> His eyes aren't running but his nose is stuffed up and he's
> breathing with his mouth open.
Is he eating and drinking? Breathing with his mouth open sounds
very worrisome. Is he coughing? Any dried mucous around his nose? I
know with the kittens when they had stuffy noses they were quick to
lick their nose and I'd rarely see any snot. Bonnie went through a
bout of stuffy nose last summer, with a cough, and I was worried
about asthma. Vet xrayed but didn't see any signs of it. Yet. I
still worry that she might have been in early stages of asthma, and
that these early signs are seasonal.

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Cheryl
CatNipped - 06 Jan 2006 02:22 GMT
>>> Purrs for Eli to feel better soon. Could he have something
>>> stuck in his nose? Are his eyes running?
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> still worry that she might have been in early stages of asthma, and
> that these early signs are seasonal.
Also worrisome is that when they have a stuffed up nose they will usually
stop eating and *that* could lead to hepatic lipadosis.

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Hugs,
CatNipped
See all my masters at: http://www.PossiblePlaces.com/CatNipped/
Cheryl - 06 Jan 2006 02:32 GMT
> Also worrisome is that when they have a stuffed up nose they
> will usually stop eating and *that* could lead to hepatic
> lipadosis.
Exactly. I had a cat who got hepatic lipidosis. My beloved Shadow. It
was the most horrible thing I've been through with a pet, and almost
the most horrible of any experience with any living being. Once the
liver gets sick, trying to get them to eat again even if they can
smell again is nearly impossible. It makes them so sick.
Not eating is not a good thing at all. Especially for a cat.
Something about how their liver can't be allowed to try to use body
fat for energy or something.

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Cheryl
sriddles@aol.com - 06 Jan 2006 06:08 GMT
> > Also worrisome is that when they have a stuffed up nose they
> > will usually stop eating and *that* could lead to hepatic
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
> --
> Cheryl
I hear that. After going through the disease, you never think the same
way about a sick cat, no matter even if it's just a stuffy nose. The
original illness becomes secondary, sometimes you never even figure out
what it was. It's the HL that can kill them. When Odie Man misses a
meal, I start offering him whatever he wants.
Sherry
Wayne Mitchell - 06 Jan 2006 02:30 GMT
>Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
>sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
>Thanks.
We'll get some feel better purrs going for Eli. (I'll have to
go downstairs and roust the crew. They haven't come up to bug
me yet this evening, and here it is almost supper time. That's
unheard of.)

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Wayne, with special purrformances by Will and Heidi
badwilson - 06 Jan 2006 03:11 GMT
Get well purrs for Eli coming up.

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Britta
"There is no snooze button on a cat who wants breakfast." -- Unknown
Check out pictures of Vino at:
http://photos.yahoo.com/badwilson click on the Vino album
> Some purrs for Eli would be appreciated. He's been sniffling and
> sneezing since last night and is staying in the house today.
>
> Thanks.