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> Out of the Cage! > Holiday
2006 > Picasso Veterinary Fund in Action: Tiny Rescued Kitten
to Celebrate First Birthday at Christmas
Picasso Veterinary Fund in Action
Tiny Rescued Kitten to Celebrate First Birthday
at Christmas
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Tiny Carmella will celebrate
her first birthday this Christmas, thanks to rescuer
Tammy Cross and the Picasso Veterinary Fund.
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Four-week-old Carmella weighed only ounces when
Tammy Cross took her, and four two-day-old orphaned kittens, from
an Animal Care & Control (AC&C) shelter in February this
year. She was one of several cats who came into the shelter following
a disastrous fire in the Bronx that left dozens of families homeless.
Well-known for her remarkable success with bottle-baby
kittens, Tammy fed and nursed the kittens until they could eat on
their own. The four younger kittens grew larger and stronger. But
not Carmella.
The four healthy kittens were eventually adopted
out by Tammy to wonderful and loving homes in the neighborhood,
but Tammy continued to care for tiny Carmella, who, although long
recovered from her initial eye infection, was not growing larger.
Tammy took her to Dr. Patrick Cotter, a veterinarian on Manhattan's
upper east side who has treated hundreds of animals from many of
the city's rescue groups. According to Tammy, even Dr. Cotter was
amazed by the kitten's tiny size. He diagnosed Carmella as suffering
from hypothyroidism, an extremely rare condition in cats, which
resulted in Carmella's unusually tiny size. At seven months old,
she weighed in at only 1.75 pounds. Upon further research, it seems
that the rare condition of hyperthyroidism is closely associated
with dwarfism. However, Carmella's body isn't disfigured or out
of proportion; only her front paws are slightly malformed.
Nearly a year after her diagnosis, Carmella has
gained approximately a pound, leveling out at two pounds, seven
ounces. "Given that the smallest living cat documented on record
weighs three pounds, Carmella just might be the tiniest little cat
in the world," says Tammy.
As she approaches her first birthday this holiday
season, Carmella remains in Tammy's care and is doing well —
romping through the apartment and scaling the side of the bed like
a mountain climber, since she's too tiny to leap the distance. Although
she eats well (according to Tammy, she loves Cheetos!), Carmella
will remain tiny her entire life. But she is enjoying her tiny self,
and Tammy is extremely attached to her.
It's not surprising that Tammy succeeded in helping
Carmella survive being orphaned at such an early age and dealing
with a rare medical condition. Tammy, who currently is in nursing
school, has been caring for bottle-babies for sixteen years, tending
only to critically ill and orphaned kittens under eight weeks old.
Her care of these special little orphans eventually led Tammy to
create Kitten Little Rescue, which this year became a member of
the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals. As a result, Tammy qualified
for funding from the Picasso Veterinary
Fund to pay for some of Carmella's medical tests and care.
Tammy says she's looking forward to celebrating
Carmella's first birthday on Christmas. "She's a little miracle,"
says Tammy. And what could be more perfect than celebrating a miracle
at Christmastime?
You can celebrate miracles this holiday season and
help make miracles like Carmella's story continue to happen by giving
a gift of love to the Picasso Veterinary Fund. The fund, created
by Bernadette Peters and Mary Tyler Moore and administered by the
Mayor's Alliance, helps pay for extraordinary medical treatment
for sick and injured animals that arrive at NYC's Animal Care &
Control shelters and are taken in by Mayor's Alliance member rescue
groups and shelters to find them loving homes.
To donate to the fund, or read more about some of
the many animals whose lives it has helped save, click
here.
| About the Picasso Veterinary
Fund
The
Picasso
Veterinary Fund, administered by the Mayor's Alliance
for NYC's Animals, provides financial assistance to help pay
for extraordinary life-saving medical treatment for AC&C
animals transferred to other Alliance Participating Organizations
for adoption. Since 2003, hundreds of dogs and cats have received
medical treatment paid for by this fund. Click
here to read about some of the lucky Picasso recipients,
adopt a Picasso pet, subscribe to the Picasso Veterinary
Fund in Action! newsletter, or make a convenient online
donation to the fund.
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