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Faulty test? Bad laboratory procedures? Could be any number of things, all
the way from your vet got lab samples mixed up, to the testing kit was
defective, to it's possible your breeder isn't god and can't control everything
all the time, to maybe your breeder wasn't so reputable after all. OR, if your
cat has ever been boarded or spent any time in a place other than your own home,
she might have been infected there (highly unlikely unless you boarded her at a
VERY nasty place where they let boarders interact). Anyways, there's lots of
reasons HOW it COULD have happened, however unlikely. BUT, chances are,
it's just a bad test result. Wait a month, go to a DIFFERENT vet (one that might
have newer or a different batch of test kits). Then, if THAT comes back
positive, have blood drawn and send off for an IFA, done at a large lab, not in
house at the vet's office.
Jenn http://ucat.us http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html Adopt a cat from UCAT rescue: http://ucat.us/adopt.html Adopt a FIV+ cat: http://ucat.us/AWrescue/FIV/ http://ucat.us/FIVadopt.html Adopt a FELV+ cat: http://ucat.us/FELVadopt.html |
No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.4.1/312 - Release Date: 4/14/2006

