Kitten with Rare Condition Nobody Could Explain Decided It Was No Reason to Stop Being the Most Joyful Cat
A kitten transferred to a foster home as a suspected thyroid case turned out to carry a diagnosis so rare that most veterinarians go their entire careers without seeing it once. She remains completely unbothered by this information. Silver StubCredit: Ellen CarozzaSilver Stub arrived from Prince William Animal Shelter in Northern Virginia as a quiet question mark. She looked far younger than her age suggested, a tiny silhouette of a cat who never seemed to catch up to the calendar. The first working theory was a thyroid condition. Preliminary labs were drawn.Silver Stub, for her part, had a room to explore and took her time doing it. Slow, deliberate steps. Alert eyes tracking everything. A kitten with somewhere to be and no particular intention of rushing.The answer waiting in her bloodwork turned out to be something almost no one in veterinary medicine ever encounters in person. Credit: Ellen CarozzaEllen Carozza LVT, VTS(CP-Feline), a licensed veterinary technician and the foster caring for Silver Stub, confirmed what the additional testing revealed. Silver Stub has pituitary dwarfism, a condition so rare in cats that only a handful of cases have ever been documented in all of veterinary literature. Her body does not produce enough growth hormone, which is what keeps her perpetually kitten-sized. Most vets go their entire careers without seeing it once.It is treatable. With specialized growth hormone therapy, Silver Stub has a genuine path toward growing stronger and living a fuller life, and that is exactly the course Ellen is pursuing. Credit: Ellen CarozzaNone of this appears to have reached Silver Stub yet.She moves through her foster home the way she moves through everything: carefully, deliberately, on her own schedule. Each step is considered. Each new corner gets a proper look before she commits to it. Around her, other kittens tumble and scramble. Silver Stub watches, takes note, and proceeds at exactly the pace she has decided is appropriate. Credit: Ellen CarozzaShe has opinions about the pace; it should be said. She has opinions about most things. There is a confidence to her that has nothing to do with her size and everything to do with who she is. Other cats in the foster home do not rattle her. New faces do not rattle her. She takes them in with those wide, steady eyes and files them under things she has already handled.Playful and determined are two words that come to mind. Both are accurate. Neither quite covers it. Credit: Ellen CarozzaShe came into foster care with more trust than anyone had any right to expect from a kitten who had been passed along before anyone understood what she was carrying. She walked in and started investigating immediately, the way a cat does when she has already decided a place belongs to her.The delayed reaction times, the cautious steps, the small body navigating a big world none of it reads as limitation when you watch her. It reads as method. Credit: Ellen CarozzaShe has settled into the rhythm of the foster home, tucking herself alongside companions, accepting the warmth of other small bodies nearby without any particular fuss. The kittens and cats around her do not seem to register as a disruption. They are just part of the landscape she has claimed. What Silver Stub has given the veterinary world, without knowing it, is a case worth documenting. Ellen and her team are also working to ensure Silver Stub's case extends beyond her own care. They plan to write and publish her medical case report, so that veterinarians worldwide can learn from her story and the next tiny kitten who arrives at a clinic, too small for her age and full of unanswered questions, might be recognized faster because of her. Credit: Ellen CarozzaSilver Stub will likely always be small. The people around her have built their care around that reality, and she has accepted their care the way she accepts everything else: without drama, on her own terms, with those steady eyes taking it all in.She does not know she is rare. She does not know her case may one day help other cats like her. She only knows there is more to explore, and she is getting to it. Credit: Ellen CarozzaShare this story with your friends. View more on Silver Stub and Ellen Carozza, LVT, VTS (CP-Feline) on Instagram @thecatlvt and Facebook.Related Story: They Bring in a Litter of Kittens and Notice One is Extra Small, Turns Out the Tiny Cat Needs Special Help