Lee makes a point, You probably do not want to mix a FL+ cat with others if that cat is a fighter. My Pookie is a "total" marshmellow. And he doesn't even like to mingle with the other cats. He'll be in the same room with them, but never grooms or lies next to them. Also this summer when he was symptomatic, he was separated into his own room. I have heard that what most often kills FL+ cats is an infection that they cannot fight because the virus attacks their immune system. My holistic vet, besides the accupuncture, has proscribed Wei Qi (Way chee) for his immune system. He is also on Standard Process Feline Immune System Support. The regular vets will not know about these (sadly). The Baytril (regular vet) knock out what secondary infection he came up with, and the accupuncture and these other herbs brought him to full health. Because the holistic vet was so helpful, I would recommend them to anyone. No kidding....one day he was not eating and running a temp....the day after the accupuncture, he jumped on my lap, had a cold nose, and started eating. I don't care how it works.....but it did for him. Grateful mom......

On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 8:27 AM, Lee Evans wrote:

What I meant is that I don't mix leukemia positive cats into my general group as I would an FIV positive cat with a marshmallow personality who does not fight, not an alpha cat type. I did have two feline leukemia positive cats for over two years. They lived together in a separate room with each other. They were perfectly healthy for those two years, then suddenly turned symptomatic. One passed away quickly from what the vet diagnosed as bone marrow cancer. The other simply lost weight uncontrollably and followed his buddy over the edge. He probably also had bone marrow cancer or lymphoma. Those are the most likely two illness that kill the leukemia positive cats when the disease goes active. I also found a wonderful  person who had had losses from feline leukemia but was willing to go through the heartbreak again just to give a cat a chance at life. One of the cats I gave to her passed away in two years. The second one I begged her to take ( I think she was ready to shoot me when phoned to ask if she would foster another FeLv+ cat) is still living the life of luxury with her. It has been 6 years and counting so far. Keeping all fingers and paws crossed.





________________________________
From: Shelley Theye <ve...@bellsouth.net>
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2013 6:39 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Question about FeLV/FIV testing


Hi,
Thanks for describing your cats' histories.
Can you explain what you mean in the last few sentences of your posting? 
However, I do not mix positive-for- leukemia cats with my regular group. Right now all the cats who are with me are either negative or turned.

Shelley


On Sep 24, 2013, at 8:37 PM, Lee Evans wrote:



From: Lee Evans <moonsiste...@yahoo.com>
To: "felvtalk@felineleukemia.org" <felvtalk@felineleukemia.org> Sent: Tuesday, September 24, 2013 7:33 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Question about FeLV/FIV testing

You are a good, caring and compassionate person. I don't feel that FeLv is as contagious as vets try to panic us into thinking. I had two cats mixed in with 8 others. They all lived together in cat harmony for many years, grooming each other, eating, drinking together and using the same litter boxes. They lived in love and happiness. Then Tiger and Twerp became ill. They were very old, around 15 years. I had had them tested twice throughout their lifetime when each had come down with a very stubborn URI. But they had tested negative both times. At the end of their days, I had them tested again to see if they were not suffering from old age but from something I could possibly treat. Along with the fact that they both had renal failure, they both tested positive for FeLv. Probably, the virus was dormant in the bone marrow all those years but when their immune system began to break down and their kidneys were failing, the virus took hold also. They
passed away quietly within hours of each other. The other 8 cats who had been living with them tested negative for everything and all died of old age and renal failure. I don't know when Tiger and Twerp became actively FeLv+ but it doesn't matter. It shows that even with such close interaction, the cats that did not test positive still did not test positive. However, I do not mix positive-for- leukemia cats with my regular group. Right now all the cats who are with me are either negative or turned. However, I do have a few little marshmallows who are FIV+ mixed into the group because they don't fight. I also have a small FIV "shelter", a detached building of one large room and a wire-enclosed porch for four FIV+ cats who have a bit of an attitude and are not to be trusted to keep a friendly discussion friendly.




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