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Nini Love

Oct 23



Two days ago I brought my beautiful senior (15 year old) cat Nini home from rear leg amputation surgery. I came downstairs one night to find her sitting on the ground, unable to walk. I had left her sitting on the bed completely normal only a couple hours earlier. I brought her to an emergency clinic, and was told she had a spiral fracture in her femur. 

She spent the night in the hospital and the next day we got the radiology results back. She had an anomaly on her femur about 1 cm in size that the fracture had originated from. The doctor said this was indicative of a bone tumor, which weakened the bone and caused the leg to break.

Unfortunately it would be a week or two before we could get results of a biopsy confirming that it was cancer. I was told the two options were to set the fracture or amputate the leg. In the meantime, they would do an abdominal ultrasound and chest X-ray to see if there were tumors elsewhere in her body.


     Nini in the garden a few years ago

I spent the next few hours alternating between crying my eyes out, researching what the best option would be, and quietly meditating, trying to cut through the sadness, fear and anxiety. I had to decide whether to set the fracture or amputate Nini’s leg. If we set the fracture and then find out in a week she has cancer, her leg will need to be amputated anyway, and she will have to go through another intense painful surgery. But if I decide to amputate her leg now, and she doesn’t have cancer then I amputated her leg unnecessarily. It was an extremely difficult decision to make without having all the information.

Nini and her sister relaxing on the bed a few months ago

Her ultrasound and x-ray showed no signs of tumors elsewhere in her body. After having a really good conversation with the doctor, my own research and my gut feeling, we decided to amputate the leg. Although we didn’t have complete information, I felt like most signs pointed to cancer. And I was really worried about Nini going through two surgeries in less than two weeks if she ends up having cancer. 

Nini is my best friend and soul mate. I have never had and probably will never have another connection with anybody, cat, human or otherwise like the one I have with Nini. I love her dearly and plan to do all I can to make sure she has a happy, healthy life.

3 comments so far

  1. admin
    4:34 pm - 10-24-2022

    Welcome and thank you for sharing Nini’s story. Your future blog posts and pages will publish immediately without requiring moderation. We’ve added your site to the growing list of 100+ Tri-kitty Blogs.

    You will find much more help and feedback in the discussion forums or by searching the member blogs. Start here for help finding the many Tripawds Resources an assistance programs.

  2. benny55
    4:42 pm - 10-25-2022

    So sorry you were facing thos hurdle with Nina. She is clearly loved and adored.♥️
    AMD she is so very beautiful.
    I’m goin to hip over to your update post and see jow things are going.
    Hugs
    Sally and Alumni Happy Hannah and Merry Myrtle and Frankie too!

  3. jerry
    5:17 pm - 10-25-2022

    Thank you so so so much for starting Nini’s blog. Your story is already helping others who are caught in the same difficult situation, even for dog parents. Deciding on amputating isn’t easy for any pet parent but it’s especially difficult for those of senior pets. Nini looks really, really good for her age! Cancer or not she looks like she has what it takes to bounce back and continue enjoying life as she knows it. I’m looking forward to following along with your journey. Sorry you had to join our club though!

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