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Old July 7th 09, 07:58 AM posted to rec.pets.cats.health+behav
Phil P.
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Default I Think My Kitten Has Cerebellar Hypoplasia


"Poe" wrote in message
...


I have a 6-week old foster kitten. He is from a litter of four, with two
dying at birth, and one dying about one day old. He is the sole survivor.

I've been increasingly worried about his motor skills. At 4-5 weeks I
expected to see him grow stronger, and by week 6, stable on his feet.
Instead, he seems to have plateaued at around week 4 - falls over all
the time, can't coordinate. Can't really use the litter box, because he
cannot hold himself up. He's started trembling, especially after eating.
At first I thought he was straining to make a bowel movement, but after
researching I think it is another symptom of Cerebellar Hyperplasia. I
viewed a few videos on youTube of cats with this disorder, and I am
pretty sure now it is what he has.

So - what do others here know about the disorder? I've googled around,
and see that cats can live a long, pain-free life with the disorder. I
am fostering him from our shelter, so IDK if they'll want to put him
down. I'm trying to get as much info I can right now to determine if I
should fight to keep him alive, get him adopted, or if I should let him
be put down (he belongs to the shelter, not to me).

Thanks in advance.


If your shelter even thinks about killing kittens with cerebellar
hyperplasia, you're with the wrong shelter. Almost all the kittens I've seen
with CH learn to compensate and live long and happy lives. They grow
stronger and learn to adapt more and more with each passing day. If your
shelter wants to kill him, I'd keep him and continue fostering him on my own
until he's 10-12 weeks. Then I'd bring him in on adoption days. You just
have to wait for the right person to see him- they're out there- you just
have to be patient.

Best of luck,

Phil