Summary
During his visit to Fluffy's, [Jim Claghorn] took a look at the feline, who was foaming at the mouth and had red, irritated gums, and quickly diagnosed the cure: removal of his teeth. Fluffy's owner was surprised. "You mean there's a cure?" she asked. Apparently the previous vet hadn't suggested one.
Hard-luck Fluff was also sneezy. Claghorn made his diagnosis on the allergy a little less conventionally. "I'll bet you anything that cat has hay fever," he said after leaving. "Every time I'm in a house where the animal has allergies, my nose starts running, my throat starts to close up, and I start to lose my voice.""You either fix 'em, or you put 'em down," says Claghorn. "The one thing I will not do is watch an animal suffer-I don't care about money [compared to suffering]. If there's no money, we'll work around it."See the full content of this document
Extract
Heals On Wheels
Fluffy the cat had bad teeth. A veterinarian gave Fluffy steroid shots to decrease the pain. The steroids turned Fluffy-whose name has been changed to protect his identity-into a diabetic, so the vet put him on an antibio...
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