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Blogger Denita TwoDragons said...

Hee hee! Maybe she has "female pattern hairyness"...? ;-)

I guess sphynx cats get the opposite thing with chemo that furry critters (or people) get. Or maybe someone slipped Rogaine into her bath water! Soon she'll have enough fur to make a nice combover...

--TwoDragons

March 31, 2009

Anonymous KittyChymira said...

Perhaps it has something to do with dominant and supressed genetics? Some bio-awesome person care toy delve into that? I don't know why she would grow hair. . . but she looks none too pleased with the newfound fuzz.

March 31, 2009

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have a feeling it was the chemo. Chemo damages all the bodies cells in order to kill the cancer cells that can't easily repair themselves; the other cells, healthy cells can recover. I have a feeling that as those healthy cells attempted to rapidly recover in order to survive, they went into overdrive in all functions, thus producing more hair than usual.

March 31, 2009

Blogger Frank Baron said...

As my dear old great-granny might have said, had she spoken English - "It just shows to go ya'. Ya' never know."

She was wise.

March 31, 2009

Anonymous Yvonne Navarro said...

Ah, I have had the distinct delight of being able to personally pet one of those cats at Borderlands, at a signing a few years back. They are so ugly they are absolutely beautiful and irresistible.

March 31, 2009

Anonymous nihil said...

For a really geeky answer: http://www.nature.com/jid/journal/v127/n1/abs/5700486a.html

It is interesting though that the car now has fine hair. Of course, this could be applied to studying hairless rats and chemo to seek new ways to treat hair loss as a result of chemo or baldness.

April 01, 2009

Anonymous Anonymous said...

After my Great Aunt had chemo and radiation for cancer, her formally grey and thinning hair fell out and was replaced with luxurious glossy black hair that fell in ringlets. It was very odd. She thought it was hilarious. I agree with the poster who mentioned changes in gene expression, as that is what the doctor told my aunt at the time.

April 02, 2009

Blogger Raging Wombat said...

I didn't have a clue about any of this. Fascinating.

April 02, 2009

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hello!

I am one of the people that Ripley owns, and I just wanted to correct a slight error in the write-up. The weird thing is that she never had any chemotherapy, just radiation therapy. Still, we're bewildered at the (relatively) sudden fuzziness and pretty sure it is connected to her surgery and its aftermath. It hasn't changed her personality at all, though -- she's still a diva and a cuddle slut, and happy to receive visitors.

April 05, 2009

Blogger Raging Wombat said...

Thank you for the correction, person who is owned by Ripley. Fascinating tale. I look forward to dropping in on your shop when next I'm in the city.

April 06, 2009

Anonymous Anonymous said...

This looks like a Cornish Rex to me, if it is a cat who had cancer, it resembles the breed of Cornish Rex very closely.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornish_rex

April 13, 2009

Blogger Caitlin said...

Radiation damages your DNA as well. A cat growing hair back after such a procedure is the same as a once straight-haired human growing curly hair after such a procedure. The DNA in the animal's cells have been damaged and the genes are now replicating and expressing mutated codon sequences.

June 18, 2010

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