It could also just be the food. We had a cat at the shelter with horrible 
diarrhea. After tons of money spent on tests (all negative) and meds, switching 
his food has solved the problem. If he eats anything else, it comes back.
   
  Beth
  
Susan Hoffman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  Any suggestions?  Yeah -- metronidazole (Flagyl).  Parasites, such as 
giardia, very often do not show up in a fecal.  I'm surprised the vet did not 
mention this.  Many vets will treat with metronidazole on the basis of 
symptoms, even when a fecal is negative.  I don't think I'd be jumping ahead to 
cancer without at least trying standard treatments for giardia (metronidazole) 
and coccidia (Albon).  If both of these failed I would look at tritrichomonas 
foetus (treated with Ronidazole).  Is it possible the vet is assuming lymphoma 
because the cat is FeLV+ rather than looking at more common and treatable 
causes?

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:   I have been fostering a FELV pos. cat for over 6 
months and she has chronic diarrhea multiple times a day.  She has been tested 
numerous times for parasites and been dewormed.  Our vet feels it may be 
lymphoma.  If it is, how long do these cats live?  Otherwise she is doing 
fairly well for a positive cat.   
Also, any suggestions to combatting the diarrhea would be helpful.  I use 
pumpkin, slippery elm, and bentonite clay powder daily which helps to some 
degree.  Her stools are still soft and she has accidents still and is in the 
litterbox frequently. 
Thanks for any info. 
Diane 


 
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