Taylor,
Make sure and read Caroline's post on feeding raw chicken livers and lean 
hamburger to Monkee.  






                                                 If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
                                                 from the shelter of compassion 
and pity, you will have men who 
                                                 will deal likewise with their 
fellow man.
                                                                  St. Francis
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Taylor Scobie Humphrey 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, June 29, 2007 2:01 AM
  Subject: Re: To Caroline: Re: Anemia Issues 


  Caroline, I'm in the same boat with my little Sammy.  He and his two brothers 
(triplets--I raised 'em from infancy with no catmommy so they are my tiny 
kidlets--who knew they'd be cats!?) were negative for FeLV and then at nine 
months Sammy had really alarming big swollen glands like--poof!--one morning 
and after tests found out on Monday that my tough little character was FeLV+ 
and on Tuesday that he had lymphoma.  Tears, tears.  He has gone out of 
remission after nearly three very good months and now he's got at most two 
months with a new chemotherapy protocol and I am trying not to lose it here.  
At least thank God he will see his first birthday and that of his sibbies.  So 
far his sibbies remain FeLV- and I just don't know how they will be without 
their sib in a few months.  Or how I will be, for that matter.  I'm a wreck 
already, of course.


  Thinking of you, your mom and your darling Monkee, 


  Taylor and the 3 Orange Boyz (my babies)




  "Consciousness is Causal 
   and Physicality is its
   Manifestation."




  On Jun 28, 2007, at 12:06 PM, wendy wrote:


    P.S. Chemo can cause anemia.  I don't know if I
    mentioned this or not.


    :)
    Wendy


    --- Caroline Kaufmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    wrote:




    ---------------------------------


    Hi everyone.  I wanted to provide an update on my FeLV
    pos. and lymphosarcoma cat Monkee.  He saw his Vet
    yesterday to determine whether the Epogen had helped
    his anemia.  The news was very bad.  Apparently last
    week, when the anemia started, his Red Blood cell
    count was 13%.  After a week (& 3 doses of the
    Epogen), his RBC count was actually worse, 10%. 
    However, Monkee’s White Blood Cell count is normal (it
    was down last week) and his lymphocyte count is
    normal.  Dr. Daley also found a lymph node in his
    groin that is enlarged (but it can’t be felt from the
    outside- it runs along the artery in the leg).  His
    Vet said she thinks the FeLV is causing the problem,
    or it could be the lymphosarcoma, but when pressed,
    she said that she honestly doubted it was the cancer. 
    She presented 3 options: (1) a bone marrow
    aspirate/biopsy to determine what is going on at the
    cellular level; however, it is invasive and Monkee
    would need sedation- which he couldn’t get anyway
    while so anemic (so he'd need a blood transfusion 1st,
    just to be able to do the biospy);  However, the
    biopsy, in her opinion, would probably just tell us
    it’s FeLV causing the anemia; (2) a blood transfusion
    to literally buy me more time with him; (3) try
    another dose of chemo in hopes that the anemia is
    being caused by lymphosarcoma, although, as I said
    previously, she doubted it and that was a shot in the
    dark. 


    My mother and I did not want to put this cat through
    chemo again (although he did very well with the first
    round).  But now that he is actively anemic, there was
    no way I would do it, especially knowing that Dr.
    Daley really didn’t think the chemo would actually
    help the situation.  We also didn’t want to put him
    through a bone marrow biopsy that would probably tell
    us what we already know, but don’t want to admit…that
    for four years, I had the healthiest, beefiest,
    toughest cat in the world, who never even suffered
    from a urinary tract infection; who was so healthy, I
    wanted to test him a 3rd time this summer for FeLV
    because I was sure he didn’t have it….To now, out of
    nowhere, in a span of 2 months, we have gone from
    that, to a severely anemic, suffering, FeLV cat with
    lymphosarcoma.  


    Dr. Daley gave him days.  Days.  Which my mom and I
    were not prepared to hear at all.  I mean, he is
    eating, drinking, using the litter box, he is thick
    (he was slightly overweight to begin with, so that is
    helping him now).  Yes, he’s not “Monkee” as I have
    known him, but he just doesn’t look to me like he’s on
    his last leg.  When we questioned her on the “days”
    prognosis she explained that due to the FeLV virus,
    and the anemia, his body is not making RBC and his
    brain is not getting enough oxygen and although he
    seems okay now, he is dizzy, lightheaded, probably
    having vertigo, and all of that will continue to get
    worse because his body is not manufacturing RBC- which
    carry oxygen in the blood, and eventually, his
    eating/drinking and making it to the litter box will
    all drop off.  


    We asked what could be done and she said, if you “are
    not ready yet,” she recommended the blood transfusion,
    which will give him about two weeks, and then the
    benefits of the transferred blood will wear off and he
    will start suffering the anemia symptoms again because
    his body is not producing it’s own RBC.  She also said
    that morally, with FeLV cats, she will do 2 blood
    transfusions, and then that is it.  It is fighting a
    losing battle and that is as far as she will take it.


    I was wrecked and my mother was crying too.  I decided
    to pull myself together and still take Monkee to the
    Holistic Vet, Dr. Susan Maier, after we left Dr.
    Daley’s.  It was our first visit and I thought, I am
    so desperate right now, it can’t hurt.  A funny story
    about this visit: Monkee totally perked up as soon as
    we left Dr. Daley’s (he hates it there!).  Dr. Maier
    has a few black and white “clinic cats” that roam
    around and as soon as we walked in, Monkee, in his
    carrier, freaked out (he hates other cats—which is
    probably why he ended up with FeLV to begin with!).  I
    was carrying his carrier on my shoulder to an exam
    room and I instantly felt the carrier get completely
    light- there was no longer 13 lbs of weight on my
    shoulder!  I didn’t understand what happened, but I
    turned around and all I saw was black and white x 3
    (Monkee is black and white), and I just grabbed the
    first black and white form that was closest to me, and
    thank god, it was Monkee!  He had opened the front
    flap of his pet carrier—widened the zipper I guess
    with his paw and then his face, and jumped out…in an
    effort to “get” the clinic cats that were following us
    to the exam room!  I grabbed him just in time because
    he was already facing off against them ready to
    attack, and because he has FeLV, it scared me to
    death!  But that is not the behavior of a cat on his
    last leg!  As soon as we got in the room, he walked
    around and dug his paws under the door and meowed and
    basically, obsessed about the cats just outside the
    door!  It was so funny!  He really put on quite a show
    for Dr. Maier at his first visit!  So there I am, with
    my tear streaked face, Kleenex all over the place and
    swollen eyes, and my cat is basically prancing around
    Dr. Maier’s exam room acting like the King of the
    Jungle!  


    Dr. Maier said there are things she can do to help
    support Monkee’s blood transfusion and make him feel
    better.  So, we are trying Phosporus 30C, Clostrum,
    Thuja 30C and essence of flowers.  Has anyone else
    tried these on an anemic cat and had any success?  At
    this point, we will try anything.  Plus, Monkee seemed
    to enjoy his Dr. Maier visit and the whole office had
    a totally different feel (far less clinical and
    hospital-like), which was good for both of us.  Dr.
    Maier said he looks great and she is by no means ready
    to "give up on him yet."    


    However, the one thing that is troubling me the most
    is that, my mom asked Dr. Daley if a FeLV cat
    suffering from anemia could ever “come out of it”/beat
    the anemia to a point were the anemia is in remission
    and the FeLV goes dormant again?  (She was a biology
    teacher so she was thinking in terms of how other
    viruses behave).  Dr. Daley responded, flat-out, “no.”
     Meaning, once it’s started, all you can do is buy
    more time via blood transfusions because it is a
    losing battle.  I wanted to know what people on this
    list serve thought about that?  I know I need to work
    on my “denial”- this is my first and only FeLV cat, so
    it’s all new.  But this just seemed like such a
    troubling response?  


    Monkee is at Dr. Daley’s right now (and pissed!)
    getting his blood transfusion.  


    I would appreciate any insight that anyone may have,
    now that I finally have some more info about Monkee’s
    condition….


    Thx,


    Caroline in Kentucky    








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