Michelle,
 
Did you ask the Internist about helping you get acemannan?  
 
In a message dated 1/20/2007 4:16:08 PM Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Well, the internist thinks Lucy has FIP. Despite the abdominal effusion,  she 
thinks it is dry FIP because the fluid does not look like FIP fluid, and  
that the fluid is resulting from the effects of FIP on other organs.  She  
thinks 
it's FIP because of something that was found in the biopsy of the lymph  
node, I can't remember what it is called but something like granular  
something, 
or granulitis, or granuloma, which goes with FIP and not with most  other kinds 
of inflammation. Other possibilities are infection somewhere, the  effects of 
her IBD inflammation, or pancreatitis, but she said that the lymph  node 
being the way it is normally goes only with FIP so she really thinks it  is 
that.  
I am of course very distressed by this. She said she could do  exploratory 
surgery to diagnose better, but I do not see the point since FIP  is not 
treatable. I want instead to try to treat for the other things it could  be. So 
a 
broad spectrum antibiotic with anearobic properties (she said  clavamox or 
clindamycin-- any ideas which i should do, I have both?). And up  her steroids 
for 
IBD/pancreatitis.  And perhaps switch her diet to a  novel protein diet if 
there  is one that would also be ok for  pancreatitis.  And she is on feline 
interferon and I would like to get  acemannan, and then monitor her HCT and if 
it 
goes too low try epogen.
 
any thoughts? Has anyone actually had an internist, rather than a primary  
care vet, say FIP when it was not?
 
distressed,
michelle



 

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