this post was submitted on 28 Mar 2024
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Oh, I'm so glad! I've been thinking about your last post and hoping for the best. It can be such a tough call, because you don't want them to suffer, but sometimes they do pull through. Damn adorable little drama kings and queens!
I've been fostering kittens for a few years now, but had my first bottle babies and my first loss last year. In fact, 4/5 of the bottle babies I had last year tried to die at one point or another. The only one that didn't was accepted by a nursing queen that I was fostering at the same time. The most dramatic kitten was actually the last one:
I had a litter of 3 orphaned kittens. First one refused to eat, so she got tube feeding & antibiotics. A week or so later, her brother's appetite went from 200% to 5%, so he also got tube feeding & antibiotics. Both of them spent a few days on a downslide before eventually turning around. When they were about 3 weeks old, and I was finally starting to relax a bit, the third one decided it was her turn.
I was feeding them every 3 hours around the clock, but occasionally skipping one feeding per night so I could sleep for more than 2.5 hours at a time. At 6p, she threw up, but was otherwise fine, and at 9p, she didn't want to eat, but was still alert and active. I couldn't fall asleep that night, so I figured there was no point in skipping the midnight feeding. When I went to feed them, I found her completely limp and barely responsive, so I rushed her to the ER, and I was scared she'd die before we even made it there. The vet immediately took her and it was probably 20-30 minutes later when they came back to me and said she wasn't responding and it would probably be best to put her down, but they'd keep trying a little longer. It was probably 15 minutes later that the vet came back again and had me follow them to the back where the little kitten was suddenly alert & responsive again.
On the vet's advice, I went back to feeding them every 2 hours for a bit. Everything was smooth sailing from there, and I got to send them off to their forever homes when they were about 10 weeks old. I hope they don't give you any more scares!