Was Tom tested positive on the blood test (I know sometimes they test as negative when the virus is in the bone marrow, but not in blood) –

 

I am not sure what percentage of the cases when a kitty is positive for the FeLV virus, but tested negative on the blood work since it’s in the bone marrow only.

 


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Barbara Baass
Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2005 3:04 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: average lifespan

 

Doesn't seem to be a long life span. Looks like maybe 3 to 5 or 6 years. I believe that Tom was born with this because it is in the bone marrow. He probably got it from his mother. It is a shame that we have to go through pain and suffering before we die. At least most of the time we do.

Barbra Baass

Terri Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Samantha was 3 (1999)

Arielle was 4-1/2 (2001)

Gareth was 6-1/2 (2003)

Alec was 5-1/2 (2003)

 

Salome' is still with me.  She's 9.

 

RuthieGirl was 6 months (1996 -- not a FeLV related death; she was Salome's littermate).

Siggie, Sammi, and Guinevere are FeLV negative.

 

=^..^= Terri, Salome', Siggie the Tomato Vampire, Guinevere, Sammi, and 5 furangels: RuthieGirl, Samantha, Arielle, Gareth and Alec =^..^=

 

----- Original Message -----

Sent: Monday, May 30, 2005 11:44 PM

Subject: Re: average lifespan

 

Yo Jenn -

My darling Calawalla Banana Boo-boo was 3 years old. (2004)

My sweet Mittens was maybe 2.5 yrs. (2003)

My baby Mr. Black kitty was FIV and FELV+ - vet said he was 18.  I
don't believe it.  Think he was a bit younger than that - 10 yrs
maybe? (2002)

Gloria


>Well, my Moogie, who was born with FELV, lived 18 months, but it
>varies widely, and also, I did not take drastic measures to prolong
>her life. Had I done everything to the extreme, she may have lived
>to be 2 years old. I'm not really sure what the "average" life span
>of FELV+ cats is, but one study has been done on the lifespan
>expectations for cats infected with feline leukemia virus that
>tested persistently viremic (continuously tested positive). In the
>study, reported by Dr. Susan Cotter in the November 1991 issue of
>the Journal of the AVMA, most cats died within two years but about
>20% of the cats lived three or more years. Of course, if everyone
>here tells you how old their FELV+ furangels were when they passed
>on, then you'll get a good sampling, and be able to draw your own
>conclusions, but you'll have to know how long they had the virus,
>not just how long they lived, because some of them may have caught
>it later in life, and that would skew the numbers.
>
>This could potentially be a very interesting thread, I wonder if we
>qualify as a "study group"?
>
>Jenn
><http://ucat.us>http://ucat.us
><http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html>http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html


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