After the orange tabby kitten was brought in from the frigid Denver
cold, "limp, eyes closed, not shivering," a veterinarian said, shelter
staffers pulled out all the stops.
"You could sort of feel the cold coming off her," said the veterinarian,
Dr. Kasey Carter, who treated the kitten at the shelter, the Denver
Dumb Friends League.
Staff members pulled out hair dryers to warm the kitten's fur and placed
her in heating pads with mittens to warm her paws. They even injected
her with warm IV fluids and wrapped her in a bear hugger, a blanket
device with a tube that blows in warm air.
The preferred temperature for a cat is 101.5. The kitten's temperature
did not even register on a thermometer that measures temperature at 90
and up upon arrival at the shelter around 11:30 a.m. Thursday.
"When she came into the shelter, we weren't even sure if she was alive,"
said Megan Rees, a spokeswoman for the shelter, adding that the kitten
apparently had been out in temperatures below 10 degrees Fahrenheit for a
few hours.
Today, the kitten, dubbed Elsa after the Disney character because of her "fighting, little spirit" and the extreme weather she had experienced, according to Rees, is doing much better.
Elsa is reported to be in stable condition, and shelter officials hope
she will be claimed by her owner. If not, they will eventually put her
up for adoption.
It's a long way from when the 3-to-4-month-old, 1.2-pound kitten was
found outside the prior day. She was in critical condition upon arrival,
unable to move or blink her eyes.
Elsa initially showed few signs of improvement. Her temperature staying
below 90 degrees for minutes and her blood sugar levels were low from
hypothermia.
"We just continued to keep her warm," said Rees.
Elsa's temperature registered after an hour and her body showed signs of movement.
"She just started moving on her own," Carter said, laughing. "We put
some food in front of her and she immediately went for it, a little
ravenous."
Rees said that the likelihood of small kittens like Elsa surviving in such harsh conditions is low.
"They're so small and fragile to begin with," said Rees. "It's hard to
imagine a kitten surviving in such severely cold weather for an extended
period of time. ... It's just really a miracle that she was able to
pull through."
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