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hlb296's Avatar
New Member
 
Cats owned: dsh tabby and tortoiseshell
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Reading
Posts: 14
27-10-2011, 10:29 PM   #1

Fleas & buster collars - all advice welcome


hi there
I have 2 problems...
Marmite's been in a car accident 3 weeks ago, really damaged her back right leg but is fixing well. Came home yesterday with a buster collar and went loopy!

At 9.30pm tonight we've discovered the collar makes no difference, as she was able to do some kind of pussy yoga and reach the leg to lick it! The vets were clear that she wasn't to do that, so I've taken off the collar and taped up the leg myself with a sock! I'll take her back to the vets tomorrow.

Help - anyone managed to stop their cat licking a back leg wound - is my cat wierdly flexible to be able to get her head round a buster collar??

Also I'm getting lots of bites this week, she's been on our bed (not usually allowed) - she's not scratching at all.
I have found black bits of dirt on the bed sheets

Help - I assume this is fleas, top tips??

thanks Helen



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angieh's Avatar
Catsey Veteran
 
Cats owned: Magnificent moggies
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Hampshire, UK
Posts: 21,718
29-10-2011, 01:26 PM   #2

Re: Fleas & buster collars - all advice welcome


Hi Helen - sorry to hear that Marmite's been in a car accident - it's good to hear that she's on the way to recovery. What a stressful time for you all.

Start off with the fleas - yes, that's what they are. You will need to treat Marmite and because of her wound, I'd ask the vet what is best to use for her. As to your house/bedroom, the best household flea spray to use is Acclaim BUT I don't think it's recommended to use on human bedding. I found that using one of those sticky rolls to get flea dirt/larvae/eggs off the bed worked well some years ago when I had flea problems and an elderly poorly cat. Burn or bin the sticky strips - and do it daily. Washing the bedding does help but if you use a low temperature wash it will not kill the flea eggs - EEEEK! Hope this helps a bit.

As for the buster collar - is it a hardish/ cone shaped thing? Your Marmite must be a contortionist to get around it, perhaps it's the wrong size or does not fit well enough. Again, I'd ask your vet.

Good luck with it all and I do hope that Marmite improves quickly.



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dandysmom's Avatar
Catsey Veteran
 
Cats owned: Leia: blue torbie
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Washington, DC, USA
Posts: 31,378
29-10-2011, 03:33 PM   #3

Re: Fleas & buster collars - all advice welcome


I can't improve on Angie's advice. What a clever girl to manage to get around the cone collar.



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hlb296's Avatar
New Member
 
Cats owned: dsh tabby and tortoiseshell
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Reading
Posts: 14
30-10-2011, 07:09 PM   #4

Re: Fleas & buster collars - all advice welcome


Thanks - have de-fleaed the whole house - what a day!
The vet recommended Acclaim too, so bought a giant can!

Marmite now has a larger cone and seems to have resigned herself to it! Her wound is healing, so hopefully won't be too long til she can get back to normal!

thanks for your advice, it's just nice to hear it from experienced cat owners, as it's the first big problem I've hit with mine!
cheers Helen



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