Cat bald spot?

trixie108

Cathlete
We adopted a shelter cat a few weeks ago, and this morning I noticed he has a bald spot below his ear. It is slightly scabbed, almost like rug burn. He's acting totally normal, eating, playing, etc. Has anyone else experienced this? What could it be? I will probably bring him to the vet on monday, but wanted to know if anyone had some advice in the meantime. TIA!!
 
Do you have other cats? Could he have gotten in a bit of a tussle with them? My cat has very little hair in front of both her ears but that's just the way she is - a little bald in the front.
 
I'm a veterinary technician, and there are many causes for a bald spot, the primary causes being ringworm or possibly mange. Some sort of infection would not be surprising in a shelter cat. A vet will have to examine the spot and may need to perform a skin scraping and/or culture to determine the cause and treat it appropriately. Do not apply anything to the spot! This can worsen skin conditions. It should be fine until Monday, provided he is eating, drinking, has normal energy levels, and is not displaying any other signs.

And thank you for adopting a shelter cat! I'm a sucker for rescues.
 
Because of the location, I'd first suspect it's from his scratching, which could be due to ear mite irritation. (look in that ear: is it really 'dirty' looking? then ear mites, or even just filthy ears, may be the culprit).

Step 1 would be cleaning the ears: you can use human ear-cleaning fluid if you don't have pet ear cleaning stuff. Either squeeze some into the ear and rub outside at the base of the ear to loosen debris, and then let the cat shake his/her head, then wipe out any good from the outer ear with a cotton ball, or squeeze some on a cotton ball and gently wipe the inside of the ear, being careful not to push anything downward or poke down into the ear (think of gently wiping any gook up and out). Do NOT use a Qtip (too easy to puncture something).

For either task, it's easiest to sit the cat on the floor, then straddle him (legs holding him in on both sides, without you actually sitting 'on' him) to keep him controlled. When he shakes his head, be ready for lots of gook to fly (if his ears are really dirty), so maybe don't do this in a white carpeted room with fancy upholstery, LOL!)

Another possibility (which is what my cat ended up having when the vet thought he might be carrying ringworm) is some kind of allergies that make him/her itchy and scratchy. It could also be dry skin that makes him/her itchy. If your house is really dry (is YOUR skin dry? especially on the legs?), you might want to get a humidifier.

Definitely take him to the vet to have it checked out. As others have said, it could be something as innocuous as having gotten in a tussle with another cat or having dry skin...or as potentially serious as mange or ringworm.
 
My first thought was ringworm too. My kitty had ringworkm ages ago and it meant giving her baths with iodine shampoo. What a treat - hee!

I hope it's just something innocuous like a tussle with the other kittles in the house!:)

Good luck!
 
Well we're taking him in this morning to see what the deal is. The spot is already healing, but better safe than sorry, right?! I'm hoping that it was just a bit of roughhousing with one of the other cats. I checked his ears, and they are clean, so I don't think it's ear mites. What does ringworm look like? I was under the impression that it formed a circle (duh, RINGworm, lol!) but is it different in cats?

Kathryn, I was actually thinking it might be dry skin. I have really dry skin, and even when we run the humidifier it doesn't get totally better.

Hopefully it's nothing. Thanks for the replys!!
 
As far as my experience, ringworm just presents itself as a bald patch on your kitty - no rings or anything (like you would think, given the name of the condition).

-Susan L.G.
 
So what's the scoop on kitty's condition?

(Yeah, ringworm is a strange name for it: it's not a worm at all, and the lesion isn't always ring-shaped).
 
Well the vet said it just looked like he has been scratching there, or got in a fight with one of the other cats, but I asked him to take a skin scraping just to be sure...I actually might take him in for a second opinion though, because it just seems weird that he would scratch himself that hard that he would actually bleed?! I mean, it's not gushing blood or anything, but there are little red spots like when you skin your knee. Hopefully I can get him in for a second opinion before Christmas!!
 
I actually might take him in for a second opinion though, because it just seems weird that he would scratch himself that hard that he would actually bleed?!

That's not weird at all, especially if you don't trim his back claws.
Haven't you ever had an itch that it felt better to scratch (even to the point of drawing blood?) than to not? (Even people with short fingernails can scratch and itch to the point of it bleeding, so imagine what a sharp claw can do).;)
 

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