Re: [Felvtalk] reply/FROM DOT

2011-09-10 Thread dot winkler
Hi  I think you were the one who asked me if I could just try and integrate the 
3 cats since I had mentioned the trio don't get along.

I originally had Kitty (female) alpha.  Then I brought in Chloe thinking she 
would be a nice playmate for Kitty. Chloe was a kitten then.  Then Lionheart 
came along (FIV).  Lion and Chloe bonded instantly.  Lion, male dominant, kind 
of ousted Kitty. He and Chloe domineered.  It was almost like even Chloe 
started antagonizing Kitty b/c she saw Lion doing it.  
Now that Chloe has the FELV, and is separated from the other two, Lion and 
Kitty have bonded together a little better.  Although he still tends to 
domineer and he has perhaps a little too much testosterone!  His idea of 
playing is nipping and Kitty doesn't like this.  So it is not perfect, but 
better.
So, I am afraid to bring Chloe back into the picture b/c #1 (the leukemia) #2 
Lion and her may go back to their old antics!  
I am thinking perhaps better to find Chloe a nice home with another buddy.  
Wish I could do this easily.
Dot



From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Thursday, September 8, 2011 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply


I'm sorry but I just don't feel comfortable with mixing her with my other 
cats.  All my other cats are negative to FIV and FELV but have other health 
issues.  I also have several older cats.  I've already had FIP introduced in my 
house, when I adopted a cat from a groomer.  We had no idea she had it until, 
she stopped eating and had to be hospitalized.  The vet did everything to get 
her to eat but nothing worked and we had to say good bye.  Knock on wood no one 
else has ever showed signs.  My Spicy has a home with me for life, a pet in my 
home is family.  I'm just undecided on whether to get her a friend or not.  
April 

From: dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply

I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone 
passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving 
quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I use 
fountains) is the key. 
 This way, thei immune systems are operating at peak and bette able to resist 
infections.


 Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote: 
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've 
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV 
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get 
 Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except for 
 the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to 
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions among 
 vets some more flexible than others.
 
 Gloria
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been mixing 
  the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is risky.  There 
  is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And they may not pull 
  out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first fever.  I wouldn't 
  want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The other male cat I have, 
  Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more susceptible of getting it 
  even though he's been boostered with the Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get 
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion get 
  along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become territorial.  Vice 
  versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe has been out of the
 picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one other feline leukemia cat 
so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.  
  But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
  
  From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
  
  Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I 
  see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've 
  mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
   
  My 2 cents.
   
  =^..^= Terri, Siggie the
 Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6 furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, 
Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi =^..^=
  - Original Message -
  From: dot winkler
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
  
  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the 
  disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 
  stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard

Re: [Felvtalk] reply/FROM DOT

2011-09-10 Thread dlgegg
Lion sounds like my Harley who is 16 months.  He has been neutered, but 
sometimes I wonder if it took.  He is affecionate, but don't get carried away 
with that mushy stuff.  He gets carried away with himelf and aggrevates the 
others because they don't want to play all the time.  Especially Nitnoy 
(because of her tail incident does not like sudden attacks), Lil Bit who is 
so insecure, and Annie who brought her own baggage with her because of 
seperation from her owner and always being an only cat.  But even with that, we 
hae never gone beyond an angry snarl and slap.  That usually gets the messge 
across.  I have also found that when I am around, it gets worse because they 
all want to be closer to me than anyone else .  Especially so when I am on the 
computer each one is trying to get on my desk.  Things get pushed off and it is 
hard to see around and through tails and heads.  If I lay down for a nap, then 
all settle down and take a nap too.  Then they each have a favorite place to 
sleep and the problem goes away.  I think it is the same when I leave the 
house.  Then they are not competting for my attention.


 dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote: 
 Hi  I think you were the one who asked me if I could just try and integrate 
 the 3 cats since I had mentioned the trio don't get along.

I originally had Kitty (female) alpha.  Then I brought in Chloe thinking she 
would be a nice playmate for Kitty. Chloe was a kitten then.  Then Lionheart 
came along (FIV).  Lion and Chloe bonded instantly.  Lion, male dominant, kind 
of ousted Kitty. He and Chloe domineered.  It was almost like even Chloe 
started antagonizing Kitty b/c she saw Lion doing it.  
Now that Chloe has the FELV, and is separated from the other two, Lion and 
Kitty have bonded together a little better.  Although he still tends to 
domineer and he has perhaps a little too much testosterone!  His idea of 
playing is nipping and Kitty doesn't like this.  So it is not perfect, but 
better.
So, I am afraid to bring Chloe back into the picture b/c #1 (the leukemia) #2 
Lion and her may go back to their old antics!  
I am thinking perhaps better to find Chloe a nice home with another buddy.  
Wish I could do this easily.
Dot



From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Thursday, September 8, 2011 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply


I'm sorry but I just don't feel comfortable with mixing her with my other 
cats.  All my other cats are negative to FIV and FELV but have other health 
issues.  I also have several older cats.  I've already had FIP introduced in my 
house, when I adopted a cat from a groomer.  We had no idea she had it until, 
she stopped eating and had to be hospitalized.  The vet did everything to get 
her to eat but nothing worked and we had to say good bye.  Knock on wood no one 
else has ever showed signs.  My Spicy has a home with me for life, a pet in my 
home is family.  I'm just undecided on whether to get her a friend or not.  
April 

From: dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply

I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone 
passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving 
quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I use 
fountains) is the key. 
 This way, thei immune systems are operating at peak and bette able to resist 
infections.


 Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote: 
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've 
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV 
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get 
 Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except for 
 the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to 
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions among 
 vets some more flexible than others.
 
 Gloria
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been mixing 
  the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is risky.  There 
  is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And they may not pull 
  out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first fever.  I wouldn't 
  want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The other male cat I have, 
  Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more susceptible of getting it 
  even though he's been boostered with the Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get 
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion get 
  along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become territorial.  Vice

Re: [Felvtalk] reply

2011-09-08 Thread April Johnson
I'm sorry but I just don't feel comfortable with mixing her with my other 
cats.  All my other cats are negative to FIV and FELV but have other health 
issues.  I also have several older cats.  I've already had FIP introduced in my 
house, when I adopted a cat from a groomer.  We had no idea she had it until, 
she stopped eating and had to be hospitalized.  The vet did everything to get 
her to eat but nothing worked and we had to say good bye.  Knock on wood no one 
else has ever showed signs.  My Spicy has a home with me for life, a pet in my 
home is family.  I'm just undecided on whether to get her a friend or not.  
April 

From: dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply

I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone 
passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving 
quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I use 
fountains) is the key.  This way, thei immune systems are operating at peak and 
bette able to resist infections.


 Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote: 
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've 
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV 
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get 
 Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except for 
 the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to 
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions among 
 vets some more flexible than others.
 
 Gloria
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been mixing 
  the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is risky.  There 
  is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And they may not pull 
  out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first fever.  I wouldn't 
  want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The other male cat I have, 
  Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more susceptible of getting it 
  even though he's been boostered with the Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get 
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion get 
  along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become territorial.  Vice 
  versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe has been out of the 
  picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one other feline leukemia 
  cat so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.  
  But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
  
  From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
  
  Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I 
  see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've 
  mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
   
  My 2 cents.
   
  =^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6 
  furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi =^..^=
  - Original Message -
  From: dot winkler
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
  
  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the 
  disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 
  stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make it 
  through all five stages, then they have developed an immunity to the 
  disease.  Anyway, how is it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My cat 
  is so lonely.  It breaks my heart.  She wants to play with the others. Esp 
  the male cat who she knows from the clan where i rescued the two of them.  
  I really would love to adopt her out.  Just having a hard time finding 
  someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot
  
  From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
  
  Hi Dot,
   
  This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in a 
  bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree and a 
  sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know she had 
  it.  I adopted her the first weekend in June and took her to the vet a week 
  later.  The receptionist at my vets was the one that stressed getting the 
  test done because she knew that the shelter I adopted her from didn't test, 
  I had no idea.  So for a week she was with my other cats.  I just looked it 
  up there are 6

Re: [Felvtalk] reply

2011-09-08 Thread Gloria Lane
Just FYI, Fip is not contagious. Its genetic in related to another virus. 
There's a specific type (s) of corona virus that can mutaTe into FIP in 
particular due to stress conditions such as introduction into a new home. 

As I understand it once it mutates into FIP  it's not contagious but I won't 
swear to that. If a cat doesn't have the right gene, they won't get FIP anyhow. 
And of course stress is an important factor.  There's good research going on re 
FIP. 

Gloria

Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 8, 2011, at 9:26 AM, April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com wrote:

 I'm sorry but I just don't feel comfortable with mixing her with my other 
 cats.  All my other cats are negative to FIV and FELV but have other health 
 issues.  I also have several older cats.  I've already had FIP introduced in 
 my house, when I adopted a cat from a groomer.  We had no idea she had it 
 until, she stopped eating and had to be hospitalized.  The vet did everything 
 to get her to eat but nothing worked and we had to say good bye.  Knock on 
 wood no one else has ever showed signs.  My Spicy has a home with me for 
 life, a pet in my home is family.  I'm just undecided on whether to get her a 
 friend or not.  April 
 From: dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:26 PM
 Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply
 
 I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone 
 passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving 
 quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I use 
 fountains) is the key.  This way, thei immune systems are operating at peak 
 and bette able to resist infections.
 
 
  Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote: 
  It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've 
  mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV 
  cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get 
  Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except for 
  the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to 
  isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions among 
  vets some more flexible than others.
  
  Gloria
  
  Sent from my iPhone
  
  On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:
  
   Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been 
   mixing the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is risky. 
There is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And they may 
   not pull out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first fever.  I 
   wouldn't want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The other male 
   cat I have, Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more susceptible 
   of getting it even though he's been boostered with the Leukemia booster.
   I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get 
   along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion get 
   along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become territorial.  
   Vice versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe has been out of 
   the picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one other feline 
   leukemia cat so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.  
   But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
   
   From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
   To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
   Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
   Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
   
   Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I 
   see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've 
   mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.

   My 2 cents.

   =^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6 
   furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi 
   =^..^=
   - Original Message -
   From: dot winkler
   To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
   Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
   Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
   
   Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the 
   disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 
   5 stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make 
   it through all five stages, then they have developed an immunity to the 
   disease.  Anyway, how is it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My 
   cat is so lonely.  It breaks my heart.  She wants to play with the 
   others. Esp the male cat who she knows from the clan where i rescued the 
   two of them.  I really would love to adopt her out.  Just having a hard 
   time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot
   
   From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
   To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
   Sent: Wednesday

Re: [Felvtalk] reply/hi reply

2011-09-08 Thread dot winkler
Hi.  I have been reading so much input from everyone.  It is really very eye 
opening.  O.K.  Perhaps the cats can be mixed.  However, as I said,the trio 
don't get along. I would still need to place Chloe (FELV).  I would love to see 
her in a home with just one other cat, so she can bond.  Probably an FELV cat.  
So, if you think you can help, i would just love it.  I am so at a quandry what 
to do.  
She loves my other cat, Lion (FIV).  They were from the same clan.  However, I 
just truly am concerned about mixing the two together and placing together.  
I may, however, consider this.  They were the Dynamic Duo.  Playing and 
licking and sleeping together.  I am open for any help anyone can offer to 
place Chloe and/or possibly Chloe/Lion.  I can send pictures.  They are both 
cute.  Dotty



From: katskat1 katsk...@gmail.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:35 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply

As it appears you really don't want to keep this cat perhaps you can
let us know where you live so we can try and help?

Kat

On 9/7/11, dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net wrote:
 I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone
 passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving
 quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I
 use fountains) is the key.  This way, thei immune systems are operating at
 peak and bette able to resist infections.


  Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote:
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get
 Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except
 for the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions
 among vets some more flexible than others.

 Gloria

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:

  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been
  mixing the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is
  risky.  There is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And
  they may not pull out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first
  fever.  I wouldn't want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The
  other male cat I have, Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more
  susceptible of getting it even though he's been boostered with the
  Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion
  get along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become
  territorial.  Vice versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe
  has been out of the picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one
  other feline leukemia cat so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.
  But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
 
  From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I
  see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've
  mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
 
  My 2 cents.
 
  =^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6
  furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi
  =^..^=
  - Original Message -
  From: dot winkler
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the
  disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the
  5 stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make
  it through all five stages, then they have developed an immunity to the
  disease.  Anyway, how is it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My
  cat is so lonely.  It breaks my heart.  She wants to play with the
  others. Esp the male cat who she knows from the clan where i rescued the
  two of them.  I really would love to adopt her out.  Just having a hard
  time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot
 
  From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
 
  Hi Dot,
 
  This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in
  a bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree
  and a sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know
  she

Re: [Felvtalk] reply/hi reply

2011-09-08 Thread Beth
They've been together before without the FIV cat being vaccinated?

Beth

 Don't Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org
 



From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Thursday, September 8, 2011 3:01 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply/hi reply


Hi.  I have been reading so much input from everyone.  It is really very eye 
opening.  O.K.  Perhaps the cats can be mixed.  However, as I said,the trio 
don't get along. I would still need to place Chloe (FELV).  I would love to see 
her in a home with just one other cat, so she can bond.  Probably an FELV cat.  
So, if you think you can help, i would just love it.  I am so at a quandry what 
to do.  
She loves my other cat, Lion (FIV).  They were from the same clan.  However, I 
just truly am concerned about mixing the two together and placing together.  
I may, however, consider this.  They were the Dynamic Duo.  Playing and 
licking and sleeping together.  I am open for any help anyone can offer to 
place Chloe and/or possibly Chloe/Lion.  I can send pictures.  They are both 
cute.  Dotty



From: katskat1 katsk...@gmail.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:35 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply

As it appears you really don't want to keep this cat perhaps you can
let us know where you live so we can try and help?

Kat

On 9/7/11, dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net wrote:
 I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone
 passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving
 quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I
 use fountains) is the key.  This way, thei immune systems are operating at
 peak and bette able to resist infections.


  Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote:
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get
 Felv. I
 think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except
 for the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions
 among vets some more flexible than others.

 Gloria

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:

  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been
  mixing the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is
  risky.  There is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And
  they may not pull out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first
  fever.  I
 wouldn't want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The
  other male cat I have, Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more
  susceptible of getting it even though he's been boostered with the
  Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion
  get along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become
  territorial.  Vice versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe
  has been out of the picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one
  other feline leukemia cat so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.
  But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
 
  From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I
  see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've
  mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
 
  My 2 cents.
 
  =^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6
  furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi
  =^..^=
  - Original Message
 -
  From: dot winkler
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the
  disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the
  5 stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make
  it through all five stages, then they have developed an immunity to the
  disease.  Anyway, how is it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My
  cat is so lonely.  It breaks my heart.  She wants to play with the
  others. Esp the male cat who she knows from the clan where i
 rescued the
  two of them.  I really would love to adopt her out.  Just having a hard
  time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot
 
  From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org

Re: [Felvtalk] reply

2011-09-08 Thread dot winkler
Hi April - Can you tell me what FIP is?  I assume some type of stomach 
disorder.  I wish I had a separate room that I could keep Chloe in. Your 
situation sounds okay that the cat is happy there and is totally separated from 
the others and is okay with it. Laid back.  I have a small house and we have to 
keep putting Chloe in one room and then another b/c people are coming in and 
out. She also likes to go out in the back yard for about twenty minutes a day.  
So, she is not happy just being in the house.  She came from a clan I rescued 
of outdoor cats.  However she is quite cute and cuddly and affectionate.  Wish 
I had a better setup for her.  i am listening to a lot of people say they mix 
the cats and things have been okay.  I'm not sure what to do.  Dot



From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Thursday, September 8, 2011 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply


I'm sorry but I just don't feel comfortable with mixing her with my other 
cats.  All my other cats are negative to FIV and FELV but have other health 
issues.  I also have several older cats.  I've already had FIP introduced in my 
house, when I adopted a cat from a groomer.  We had no idea she had it until, 
she stopped eating and had to be hospitalized.  The vet did everything to get 
her to eat but nothing worked and we had to say good bye.  Knock on wood no one 
else has ever showed signs.  My Spicy has a home with me for life, a pet in my 
home is family.  I'm just undecided on whether to get her a friend or not.  
April 

From: dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply

I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone 
passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving 
quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I use 
fountains) is the key. 
 This way, thei immune systems are operating at peak and bette able to resist 
infections.


 Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote: 
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've 
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV 
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get 
 Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except for 
 the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to 
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions among 
 vets some more flexible than others.
 
 Gloria
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been mixing 
  the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is risky.  There 
  is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And they may not pull 
  out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first fever.  I wouldn't 
  want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The other male cat I have, 
  Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more susceptible of getting it 
  even though he's been boostered with the Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get 
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion get 
  along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become territorial.  Vice 
  versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe has been out of the
 picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one other feline leukemia cat 
so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.  
  But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
  
  From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
  
  Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I 
  see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've 
  mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
   
  My 2 cents.
   
  =^..^= Terri, Siggie the
 Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6 furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, 
Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi =^..^=
  - Original Message -
  From: dot winkler
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
  
  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the 
  disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 
  stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make it 
  through all five stages, then they have developed an immunity to the 
  disease.  Anyway, how is it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My cat 
  is so lonely.  It breaks my heart.  She wants to play with the others. Esp 
  the male cat who
 she

Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT

2011-09-07 Thread dot winkler
Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the disease  
Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 stages?  What 
does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make it through all five 
stages, then they have developed an immunity to the disease.  Anyway, how is it 
keeping your cat apart from the others?  My cat is so lonely.  It breaks my 
heart.  She wants to play with the others. Esp the male cat who she knows from 
the clan where i rescued the two of them.  I really would love to adopt her 
out.  Just having a hard time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  
It is cute.  Dot



From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV


Hi Dot, 
 
This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in a 
bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree and a 
sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know she had it.  I 
adopted her the first weekend in June and took her to the vet a week later.  
The receptionist at my vets was the one that stressed getting the test done 
because she knew that the shelter I adopted her from didn't test, I had no 
idea.  So for a week she was with my other cats.  I just looked it up there are 
6 stages of FELV.  Spicy is in stage 5. 

From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:07 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV


Hi April - I just read your mail.  My cat, Chloe, female one year old, pretty 
gray/black/caramel tabby, is also positive.  I have known since June when she 
had a fever.  She has stabilized and is doing so well now.  Very healthy and 
playful.  She is a little squirt, i call her.  I have been looking for a home 
for her since I have two other negative cats and have to keep them separated.  
She is so cute.  i hated to just put her down so figured i would give it a shot 
to see if i could adopt her.  Do you have other cats at home? How is your cat 
doing now?  You said it's in her bone marrow.  Are there different stages?  I 
am not sure totally about the disease as this is the first cat I have ever had 
in 30 years that has the leukemia.  So, it is all new to me also.   Dot 
(freehold, NJ)

From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 12:46 PM
Subject: [Felvtalk] Update


Hi,
 
A couple of weeks ago I posted about my cat Spicy who I had adopted from animal 
control unaware she hadn't been tested for FELV/FIV.  I was questioning whether 
to get her a friend or not.  Last week I had her blood sent out to confirm if 
she really had FELV.   Well her results came in yesterday, it's in her bone 
marrow.  I still haven't decided on a friend for her yet, I'm unsure what to do 
with my house already full.  I think I would need to adopt another cat with it 
already in their bone marrow too, right?  I've never had a FELV+ cat, so I 
don't know what to do.
 
April  
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Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT

2011-09-07 Thread Terri Brown
Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I see no 
reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've mixed mine in 
the past and never have I had a negative become infected.

My 2 cents.

=^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6 
furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi =^..^=
  - Original Message - 
  From: dot winklermailto:venus7ora...@yahoo.com 
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.orgmailto:felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT


  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the disease  
Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 stages?  What 
does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make it through all five 
stages, then they have developed an immunity to the disease.  Anyway, how is it 
keeping your cat apart from the others?  My cat is so lonely.  It breaks my 
heart.  She wants to play with the others. Esp the male cat who she knows from 
the clan where i rescued the two of them.  I really would love to adopt her 
out.  Just having a hard time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  
It is cute.  Dot



--
  From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV


  Hi Dot, 

  This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in a 
bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree and a sofa. 
 Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know she had it.  I 
adopted her the first weekend in June and took her to the vet a week later.  
The receptionist at my vets was the one that stressed getting the test done 
because she knew that the shelter I adopted her from didn't test, I had no 
idea.  So for a week she was with my other cats.  I just looked it up there are 
6 stages of FELV.  Spicy is in stage 5. 

  From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:07 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV


  Hi April - I just read your mail.  My cat, Chloe, female one year old, pretty 
gray/black/caramel tabby, is also positive.  I have known since June when she 
had a fever.  She has stabilized and is doing so well now.  Very healthy and 
playful.  She is a little squirt, i call her.  I have been looking for a home 
for her since I have two other negative cats and have to keep them separated.  
She is so cute.  i hated to just put her down so figured i would give it a shot 
to see if i could adopt her.  Do you have other cats at home? How is your cat 
doing now?  You said it's in her bone marrow.  Are there different stages?  I 
am not sure totally about the disease as this is the first cat I have ever had 
in 30 years that has the leukemia.  So, it is all new to me also.   Dot 
(freehold, NJ)


  From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 12:46 PM
  Subject: [Felvtalk] Update


  Hi,

  A couple of weeks ago I posted about my cat Spicy who I had adopted from 
animal control unaware she hadn't been tested for FELV/FIV.  I was questioning 
whether to get her a friend or not.  Last week I had her blood sent out to 
confirm if she really had FELV.   Well her results came in yesterday, it's in 
her bone marrow.  I still haven't decided on a friend for her yet, I'm unsure 
what to do with my house already full.  I think I would need to adopt another 
cat with it already in their bone marrow too, right?  I've never had a FELV+ 
cat, so I don't know what to do.

  April  

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Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT

2011-09-07 Thread April Johnson
this is what I found off the internet.  I didn't hear that about making threw 
the 5 phases, because there is a 6 when the disease takes over.  I know she's 
lonely sometimes because she loved being part of the family.  She was accepted 
by all the other cats.  I'm torn between trying to find her another cat with 
FELV or hoping she gets used to being by herself.  Spicy actually named 
herself.  We were driving home from the shelter and I wanted to name the other 
cat we adopted Spicy because she's orange.  Well Spicy kept answering to the 
name.  Now Spicy is black and I never thought of naming a black cat Spicy, but 
she had other ideas.  I like the name Chloe we had a cat for 14 years named 
Chloe, she had to be pts when her kidney's shutdown.  
 
 The disease has a wide range of effects. The cat can fight off the infection 
and become totally immune, can become a healthy carrier that never gets sick 
itself but can infect other cats, or a mid-level case in which the cat has a 
compromised immune system.[citation needed] Nevertheless, the development of 
lymphomas is considered the final stage of the disease. Although it is thought 
that virus protein has to be present to induce lymphomas in cats, newer 
evidence shows that a high percentage of FeLV-Antigen negative lymphomas 
contain FeLV-DNA, indicating a hit-and-run mechanism of virus induced tumor 
development.[1]
Once the virus has entered the cat, there are six phases to a FeLV infection:
* Phase One: The virus enters the cat, usually through the pharynx 
where it infects the epithelial cells and infects the tonsorial B-lymphocytes 
and macrophages. These white blood cells then filter down to the lymph nodes 
and begin to replicate. 
* Phase Two: The virus enters the blood stream and begins to distribute 
throughout the body. 
* Phase Three: The lymphoid system (which produces antibodies to attack 
infected and cancerous cells) becomes infected, with further distribution 
throughout the body. 
* Phase Four: The main point in the infection- where the virus can take 
over the body's immune system and cause viremia. During this phase the 
hemolymphatic system and intestines become infected. 
If the cat's immune system does not fight off the virus, then it goes onto:
* Phase Five: The bone marrow becomes infected. At this point, the 
virus will stay with the cat for the rest of its life. In this phase, the virus 
replicates and is released four to seven days later in infected neutrophils 
(white blood cells), and sometimes lymphocytes, monocytes (white blood cell 
formed in the bone marrow), and eosinophils (another white blood cell). 
* Phase Six: The cat's body is overwhelmed by infection and mucosal and 
glandular epithelial cells (tissue that forms a thin protective layer on 
exposed bodily surfaces and forms the lining of internal cavities, ducts, and 
organs) become infected. The virus replicates in epithelial tissues including 
salivary glands, oropharynx, stomach, esophagus, intestines, trachea, 
nasopharynx, renal tubules, bladder, pancreas, alveolar ducts, and sebaceous 
ducts from the muzzle. 

From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:02 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT


Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the disease  
Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 stages?  What 
does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make it through all five 
stages, then they have developed an immunity to the disease.  Anyway, how is it 
keeping your cat apart from the others?  My cat is so lonely.  It breaks my 
heart.  She wants to play with the others. Esp the male cat who she knows from 
the clan where i rescued the two of them.  I really would love to adopt her 
out.  Just having a hard time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  
It is cute.  Dot

From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV


Hi Dot, 
 
This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in a 
bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree and a 
sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know she had it.  I 
adopted her the first weekend in June and took her to the vet a week later.  
The receptionist at my vets was the one that stressed getting the test done 
because she knew that the shelter I adopted her from didn't test, I had no 
idea.  So for a week she was with my other cats.  I just looked it up there are 
6 stages of FELV.  Spicy is in stage 5. 

From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:07 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME

Re: [Felvtalk] reply

2011-09-07 Thread dot winkler
Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been mixing the 
cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is risky.  There is still 
a risk and chance the others could get it.  And they may not pull out of it 
like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first fever.  I wouldn't want my other 
cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The other male cat I have, Lion, has AIDS 
(FIV).  I think he would be more susceptible of getting it even though he's 
been boostered with the Leukemia booster.
I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get along.  
They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion get along.  But 
when you put Kitty into the mix, they become territorial.  Vice versa.  Kitty 
now gets along with Lion since Chloe has been out of the picture.  I would love 
to find Chloe a home with one other feline leukemia cat so she can have a 
buddy.  I am still trying.  
But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty



From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT


 
Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, 
I see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've 
mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
 
My 2 cents.
 
=^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6 
furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi 
=^..^=
- Original Message - 
From: dot  winkler 
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02  PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM  DOT


Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the  disease  
Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know  about the 5 stages?  What 
does it mean?  I think I heard that if  your cat can make it through all five 
stages, then they have developed an  immunity to the disease.  Anyway, how is 
it keeping your cat apart from  the others?  My cat is so lonely.  It breaks 
my heart.  She  wants to play with the others. Esp the male cat who she knows 
from the clan  where i rescued the two of them.  I really would love to adopt 
her out.   Just having a hard time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name  
Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot




 From: April Johnson  cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org  felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16  PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk]  Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV


Hi Dot, 
 
This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home,  Spicy lives in a 
bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of,  a cat tree and a 
sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I  didn't know she had it.  
I adopted her the first weekend in June and took  her to the vet a week 
later.  The receptionist at my vets was the one  that stressed getting the 
test done because she knew that the shelter I  adopted her from didn't test, I 
had no idea.  So for a week she was with  my other cats.  I just looked it up 
there are 6 stages of FELV.   Spicy is in stage 5. 

From: dot  winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org  felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:07  PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk]  Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV


Hi April - I just read your mail.  My cat, Chloe, female one  year old, pretty 
gray/black/caramel tabby, is also positive.  I have  known since June when she 
had a fever.  She has stabilized and is doing  so well now.  Very healthy and 
playful.  She is a little squirt, i  call her.  I have been looking for a 
home for her since I have two other  negative cats and have to keep them 
separated.  She is so cute.  i  hated to just put her down so figured i would 
give it a shot to see if i could  adopt her.  Do you have other cats at home? 
How is your cat doing now?   You said it's in her bone marrow.  Are there 
different stages?   I am not sure totally about the disease as this is the 
first cat I have  ever had in 30 years that has the leukemia.  So, it is all 
new to me  also.   Dot (freehold, NJ)


From: April Johnson  cupcake292...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org  felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 12:46  PM
Subject: [Felvtalk]  Update


Hi,
 
A couple of weeks ago I posted about my cat Spicy who I had adopted from  
animal control unaware she hadn't been tested for FELV/FIV.  I was  
questioning whether to get her a friend or not.  Last week I had her  blood 
sent out to confirm if she really had FELV.   Well her results  came in 
yesterday, it's in her bone marrow.  I still haven't decided  on a friend for 
her yet, I'm unsure what to do with my house already full.  I think I would 
need to  adopt another cat with it already in their bone marrow too, right?  
I've  never had a FELV+ cat

Re: [Felvtalk] reply

2011-09-07 Thread Gloria Lane
It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've 
mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV cats 
seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get Felv. I 
think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except for the sick 
ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to isolate Felv cats 
 so i understand. But I still find varying opinions among vets some more 
flexible than others.

Gloria

Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been mixing 
 the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is risky.  There is 
 still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And they may not pull out 
 of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first fever.  I wouldn't want my 
 other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The other male cat I have, Lion, has 
 AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more susceptible of getting it even though 
 he's been boostered with the Leukemia booster.
 I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get along. 
  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion get along.  
 But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become territorial.  Vice versa.  
 Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe has been out of the picture.  I 
 would love to find Chloe a home with one other feline leukemia cat so she can 
 have a buddy.  I am still trying.  
 But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
 
 From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
 Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
 Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I see 
 no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've mixed mine 
 in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
  
 My 2 cents.
  
 =^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6 
 furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi =^..^=
 - Original Message -
 From: dot winkler
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
 Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
 Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the disease  
 Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 stages?  What 
 does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make it through all five 
 stages, then they have developed an immunity to the disease.  Anyway, how is 
 it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My cat is so lonely.  It breaks 
 my heart.  She wants to play with the others. Esp the male cat who she knows 
 from the clan where i rescued the two of them.  I really would love to adopt 
 her out.  Just having a hard time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name 
 Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot
 
 From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
 Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
 
 Hi Dot,
  
 This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in a 
 bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree and a 
 sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know she had it.  
 I adopted her the first weekend in June and took her to the vet a week later. 
  The receptionist at my vets was the one that stressed getting the test done 
 because she knew that the shelter I adopted her from didn't test, I had no 
 idea.  So for a week she was with my other cats.  I just looked it up there 
 are 6 stages of FELV.  Spicy is in stage 5. 
 From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:07 PM
 Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
 
 Hi April - I just read your mail.  My cat, Chloe, female one year old, pretty 
 gray/black/caramel tabby, is also positive.  I have known since June when she 
 had a fever.  She has stabilized and is doing so well now.  Very healthy and 
 playful.  She is a little squirt, i call her.  I have been looking for a 
 home for her since I have two other negative cats and have to keep them 
 separated.  She is so cute.  i hated to just put her down so figured i would 
 give it a shot to see if i could adopt her.  Do you have other cats at home? 
 How is your cat doing now?  You said it's in her bone marrow.  Are there 
 different stages?  I am not sure totally about the disease as this is the 
 first cat I have ever had in 30 years that has the leukemia.  So, it is all 
 new to me also.   Dot (freehold, NJ)
 
 From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 12:46 PM
 Subject: [Felvtalk] Update
 
 Hi,
  
 A couple

Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT

2011-09-07 Thread katskat1
Again, a large number of the people posting on this site MIX positives
and negatives with the following caveat:

1. Negatives MUST be fully vaccinated incl:  FIV and FeLV
2. After initial vaccination in negative adults there should be a
waiting period before mixing.  I think it is 1 month or so but others
can confirm the correct incubation for the disease.
3.  After initial AND boosters for younger cats/kittens I wait until
the younger cat is 2 - 3 months past the final vaccination and or at
least 6 - 7 months old before mixing.
4.  I vaccinate the positive cats for all BUT FeLV and FIV (whichever
they are positive for)

I would suggest you get input on the above from others on this site
who are FAR more knowledgeable then I am but that is what I have been
doing for years now and so far have had NONE of my negatives become
positive for either disease.

kat

On 9/7/11, April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com wrote:
 this is what I found off the internet.  I didn't hear that about making
 threw the 5 phases, because there is a 6 when the disease takes over.  I
 know she's lonely sometimes because she loved being part of the family.  She
 was accepted by all the other cats.  I'm torn between trying to find her
 another cat with FELV or hoping she gets used to being by herself.  Spicy
 actually named herself.  We were driving home from the shelter and I wanted
 to name the other cat we adopted Spicy because she's orange.  Well Spicy
 kept answering to the name.  Now Spicy is black and I never thought of
 naming a black cat Spicy, but she had other ideas.  I like the name Chloe we
 had a cat for 14 years named Chloe, she had to be pts when her kidney's
 shutdown.

  The disease has a wide range of effects. The cat can fight off the
 infection and become totally immune, can become a healthy carrier that never
 gets sick itself but can infect other cats, or a mid-level case in which the
 cat has a compromised immune system.[citation needed] Nevertheless, the
 development of lymphomas is considered the final stage of the disease.
 Although it is thought that virus protein has to be present to induce
 lymphomas in cats, newer evidence shows that a high percentage of
 FeLV-Antigen negative lymphomas contain FeLV-DNA, indicating a hit-and-run
 mechanism of virus induced tumor development.[1]
 Once the virus has entered the cat, there are six phases to a FeLV
 infection:
   * Phase One: The virus enters the cat, usually through the pharynx 
 where it
 infects the epithelial cells and infects the tonsorial B-lymphocytes and
 macrophages. These white blood cells then filter down to the lymph nodes and
 begin to replicate.
   * Phase Two: The virus enters the blood stream and begins to distribute
 throughout the body.
   * Phase Three: The lymphoid system (which produces antibodies to attack
 infected and cancerous cells) becomes infected, with further distribution
 throughout the body.
   * Phase Four: The main point in the infection- where the virus can take
 over the body's immune system and cause viremia. During this phase the
 hemolymphatic system and intestines become infected.
 If the cat's immune system does not fight off the virus, then it goes onto:
   * Phase Five: The bone marrow becomes infected. At this point, the virus
 will stay with the cat for the rest of its life. In this phase, the virus
 replicates and is released four to seven days later in infected neutrophils
 (white blood cells), and sometimes lymphocytes, monocytes (white blood cell
 formed in the bone marrow), and eosinophils (another white blood cell).
   * Phase Six: The cat's body is overwhelmed by infection and mucosal and
 glandular epithelial cells (tissue that forms a thin protective layer on
 exposed bodily surfaces and forms the lining of internal cavities, ducts,
 and organs) become infected. The virus replicates in epithelial tissues
 including salivary glands, oropharynx, stomach, esophagus, intestines,
 trachea, nasopharynx, renal tubules, bladder, pancreas, alveolar ducts, and
 sebaceous ducts from the muzzle.

 From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:02 PM
 Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT


 Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the disease
  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the 5 stages?  What
 does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make it through all five
 stages, then they have developed an immunity to the disease.  Anyway, how is
 it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My cat is so lonely.  It breaks
 my heart.  She wants to play with the others. Esp the male cat who she knows
 from the clan where i rescued the two of them.  I really would love to adopt
 her out.  Just having a hard time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name
 Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot

 From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org

Re: [Felvtalk] reply

2011-09-07 Thread katskat1
As it appears you really don't want to keep this cat perhaps you can
let us know where you live so we can try and help?

Kat

On 9/7/11, dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net wrote:
 I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone
 passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving
 quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I
 use fountains) is the key.  This way, thei immune systems are operating at
 peak and bette able to resist infections.


  Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote:
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get
 Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except
 for the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions
 among vets some more flexible than others.

 Gloria

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:

  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been
  mixing the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is
  risky.  There is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And
  they may not pull out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first
  fever.  I wouldn't want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The
  other male cat I have, Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more
  susceptible of getting it even though he's been boostered with the
  Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion
  get along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become
  territorial.  Vice versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe
  has been out of the picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one
  other feline leukemia cat so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.
  But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
 
  From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I
  see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've
  mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
 
  My 2 cents.
 
  =^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6
  furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi
  =^..^=
  - Original Message -
  From: dot winkler
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the
  disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the
  5 stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make
  it through all five stages, then they have developed an immunity to the
  disease.  Anyway, how is it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My
  cat is so lonely.  It breaks my heart.  She wants to play with the
  others. Esp the male cat who she knows from the clan where i rescued the
  two of them.  I really would love to adopt her out.  Just having a hard
  time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot
 
  From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
 
  Hi Dot,
 
  This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in
  a bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree
  and a sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know
  she had it.  I adopted her the first weekend in June and took her to the
  vet a week later.  The receptionist at my vets was the one that stressed
  getting the test done because she knew that the shelter I adopted her
  from didn't test, I had no idea.  So for a week she was with my other
  cats.  I just looked it up there are 6 stages of FELV.  Spicy is in
  stage 5.
  From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:07 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
 
  Hi April - I just read your mail.  My cat, Chloe, female one year old,
  pretty gray/black/caramel tabby, is also positive.  I have known since
  June when she had a fever.  She has stabilized and is doing so well now.
   Very healthy and playful.  She is a little squirt, i call her.  I
  have been looking for a home for her since I have two other negative
  cats and have to keep them separated

Re: [Felvtalk] reply

2011-09-07 Thread ccarlsberg
I need to find mine a home. I'm in Los Angeles
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

-Original Message-
From: katskat1 katsk...@gmail.com
Sender: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
Date: Wed, 7 Sep 2011 23:35:32 
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Reply-To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] reply

As it appears you really don't want to keep this cat perhaps you can
let us know where you live so we can try and help?

Kat

On 9/7/11, dlg...@windstream.net dlg...@windstream.net wrote:
 I have been mixig felv pos and neg since 2008 and no problems yet.  Everyone
 passed their physical with flying colors this year.  Agai, I think giving
 quality food, love, a stable home and lots of exercise and clean water (I
 use fountains) is the key.  This way, thei immune systems are operating at
 peak and bette able to resist infections.


  Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net wrote:
 It's certainly personal  choice, I certainly understand.  Like I say, I've
 mixed for several years and never had problems. I mix w FIV cats too. FIV
 cats seem to have some problems with uri and gingivitis, never had one get
 Felv. I think vets don't have much experience w FIV or Felv cats except
 for the sick ones that come in and book learning, and the party line is to
 isolate Felv cats  so i understand. But I still find varying opinions
 among vets some more flexible than others.

 Gloria

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Sep 7, 2011, at 4:50 PM, dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com wrote:

  Hi - I have been reading a lot of people saying that they have been
  mixing the cats.  But I called my vet and he again said that it is
  risky.  There is still a risk and chance the others could get it.  And
  they may not pull out of it like my cat Chloe FELV) did during the first
  fever.  I wouldn't want my other cat, Kitty to come down with it.  The
  other male cat I have, Lion, has AIDS (FIV).  I think he would be more
  susceptible of getting it even though he's been boostered with the
  Leukemia booster.
  I would like to adopt Chloe out (FELV) also because the trio don't get
  along.  They only get along in two's.  In other words, Chloe and Lion
  get along.  But when you put Kitty into the mix, they become
  territorial.  Vice versa.  Kitty now gets along with Lion since Chloe
  has been out of the picture.  I would love to find Chloe a home with one
  other feline leukemia cat so she can have a buddy.  I am still trying.
  But I'm open to ideas and input.  Dotty
 
  From: Terri Brown siggies...@hotmail.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 4:22 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Dot,  if your other cats are current on vaccinations and are negative, I
  see no reason why you shouldn't mix them.  Like I've said before, I've
  mixed mine in the past and never have I had a negative become infected.
 
  My 2 cents.
 
  =^..^= Terri, Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Travis, Dori and 6
  furangels: Ruthie, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome and Sammi
  =^..^=
  - Original Message -
  From: dot winkler
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 4:02 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] REPLY FROM DOT
 
  Hi April - My vet didn't know anything about the 5 stages of the
  disease  Can you believe this.  O.K.  So, what do you know about the
  5 stages?  What does it mean?  I think I heard that if your cat can make
  it through all five stages, then they have developed an immunity to the
  disease.  Anyway, how is it keeping your cat apart from the others?  My
  cat is so lonely.  It breaks my heart.  She wants to play with the
  others. Esp the male cat who she knows from the clan where i rescued the
  two of them.  I really would love to adopt her out.  Just having a hard
  time finding someone.  P.S. - I like the name Spicy!  It is cute.  Dot
 
  From: April Johnson cupcake292...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:16 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
 
  Hi Dot,
 
  This is all new to me too.  I do have other cats at home, Spicy lives in
  a bedroom by herself.  She has two windows to look out of, a cat tree
  and a sofa.  Spicy has had no signs of the illness.  So I didn't know
  she had it.  I adopted her the first weekend in June and took her to the
  vet a week later.  The receptionist at my vets was the one that stressed
  getting the test done because she knew that the shelter I adopted her
  from didn't test, I had no idea.  So for a week she was with my other
  cats.  I just looked it up there are 6 stages of FELV.  Spicy is in
  stage 5.
  From: dot winkler venus7ora...@yahoo.com
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 2:07 PM
  Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Update/MY CAT NEEDS HOME WITH FELV
 
  Hi April - I just read your mail.  My cat, Chloe, female one year old,
  pretty