I am sure the Elisa test was wrong.  You can have Curly retested in 3 months to 
be sure.  The IFA is very accurate.  If the cat is indoor, no way to get 
infected.

From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Randy 
Henke
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2016 8:41 AM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] Questioning FELV diagnosis

Our cat, Curly, is ten years old. We found her outside as a kitten and had her 
tested for FELV at that time. She was negative. She's been strictly an indoor 
cat since then and had no contact with any potentially infected cats.
Three months ago, she wasn't acting like herself. Very lethargic and moderately 
dehydrated. We took her to the vet. She was running a low fever and her blood 
test showed severe anemia and low white cell count. The vet suspected immune 
mediated hemolytic anemia. He gave her some fluids, started her on an 
antibiotic for any potential infections and prednisone. Three days later she 
was about the same so we took her back to the vet. This time they ran an ELISA 
test to rule out FELV even though it was incredibly unlikely given her history. 
It came back positive. They drew blood at that time for an IFA test to confirm 
it and told us to discontinue the prednisone immediately.
By the next day, Curly was feeling better and she quickly bounced back to her 
old self which I suspect was due to the three days of prednisone treatment. The 
IFA test came back negative.
We were content to think the ELISA was a false positive because Curly seemed 
fine until a couple of weeks ago when she became listless and anti-social 
again. Another blood test showed her to again be very anemic.
We are very confused about what to do. The negative IFA really has me 
wondering. From my understanding, that test is 99.9% accurate in detecting the 
second stage of leukemia.

A negative IFA should mean only one of two things:

1. The cat is not infected with FELV.

2. The cat is in the early stages and has not progressed to the second stage of 
the disease where the virus infects the bone marrow.

That would mean that, in order for the anemia to have been caused by leukemia, 
the IFA should have definitely been positive at that point because it would 
need to be actively compromising the bone marrow's functioning.
I am leaning toward trying prednisone again, especially since she is hardly 
eating or moving around at this point. If anyone can point out if my logic is 
flawed, please do so. Any suggestions would be very much appreciated.
Thank you,
Randy
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