Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My cat used to do this when he became geriatric and deaf. Is he deaf? My cat would be sitting in his sphinx position and then just his head would sort of flop down and he'd fall into a deep sleep. His sleep was deep because he could no longer hear.
He still responds to a can opener, so he's not deaf. But thanks for this -- it sounds like a part of aging I hadn't seen before, maybe because he's more prone to falling asleep in the sphinx position than other cats I've had have been.
Anonymous wrote:My cat used to do this when he became geriatric and deaf. Is he deaf? My cat would be sitting in his sphinx position and then just his head would sort of flop down and he'd fall into a deep sleep. His sleep was deep because he could no longer hear.
Anonymous wrote:This warrants:
1. A call to your vet to describe symptoms.
2. Sending them a video of your cat flopping and twitching.
Anonymous wrote:My cat had mini-strokes, which caused what appeared to be odd behavior, but it wasn’t constant - he had about two episodes that caused some residual weakness.
Anonymous wrote:Btw - most vets are bringing pets in from the parking lot, without their owner. It’s no-contact.
Anonymous wrote:What happens after his head flops? Does it Walt him up, or does he continue sleeping?
I don’t remember your old thread - is this part of a constellation of symptoms? What else are you observing that us out of the norm?