Gary, I used the Mega C Plus on a feral FeLV cat for six months but ultimately he did not seroconvert because it was already in his bone marrow. Had I the opportunity to start megadoses of oral vitamin C at the beginning stages of his virus he would likely still be alive, because like taking C for the common cold, timing is key in stopping the progression of viruses.
Ascorbic acid is critical for prevention and optimal health in cats and dogs, but it is nearly impossible to get enough of it into a cat orally to eradicate an aggressive, life-threatening virus once well-established. Cats and dogs make very little vitamin C in the liver compared to most animals, hence the reason they succumb to these diseases. I talked with Wendell Belfield, DVM about his use of this protocol and he confirmed that if the infection/disease/virus is too advanced a more aggressive approach is necessary through sub-Q or IM injections or intravenous infusions. Though an excellent formula, his oral Mega-C Plus contains iron, which can limit the amount than can be used therapeutically. Otherwise, there is no toxic limit for pure ascorbic acid and the more you can get into the cat up to bowel tolerance, the more beneficial. When the body is under stress (animal or human) and fighting illness, more vitamin C is tolerated and necessary to eradicate the disease/virus. The myths about kidney stones, peeing expensive urine, etc., are just that - myths, propagated by those who would stand to lose huge money were ascorbic acid widely accepted and used for eradicating disease. Vitamin C has been known to fight 30 major diseases for over 50 years, and as Wendell Belfield DVM knew well and practiced from the 1960s on, it also cures cat and dog viruses, infection and disease. Giving high doses of sodium ascorbate intravenously to an FeLV cat in the early stages of the disease should permanently eradicate the FeLV virus as it did with FIP in my kitten, and in fact, ANY virus. I am preparing to do just such a trial on the next newly diagnosed FeLV kitten that comes into my care. The key is catching it early and administering enough to permanently destroy the virus. With my two FIP kittens, Chuckie was the first to become symptomatic. We administered IV sodium ascorbate (vitamin C) at 1 gram per pound of body weight (5,000 mg daily) for five days. We stopped the drips when he appeared better, though he soon took a nose dive and by the time my vet opened again he was too far gone from a neurological standpoint. The virus had not been totally eradicated in those five days at that low dose, and when the C was stopped the virus replicated and killed him. When his sister Angelica began to manifest with the same chronic high fevers, weight loss, lack of appetite, and transient neurologic symptoms, a passage in Klenner's Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C grabbed my attention, to wit: ". . . failure to benefit from Vitamin C use is usually due to inadequate amounts being used for too short a period of time." Newly armed with this information, we doubled Angelica's IV C to 2g per pound of body weight so that she was getting 10g daily. We continued the drips daily and on day 7 her 105 fever came down. We continued for 4 more days to make sure the virus was killed and we didn't have a repeat situation as with poor Chuckie. Her fevers remained down through day 11 and then we tapered her off of the C and gave it orally to avoid rebound scurvy. It has been 3 weeks and she is eating well, gaining weight, and totally asymptomatic. Needless to say, she now gets C in her food every day. The difference between the two treatment scenarios is that Chuckie received too many immune-destroying antibiotics and steroids before his official FIP diagnosis returned and by the time we started the IV C drips he was terribly compromised, though he probably would have survived had I only realized that we were administering too little vitamin C for too short a time. When Angelica became sick I went straight to the IV vitamin C as my first line of defense and apparently that, and the proper dosage amount and administration length, were the keys to curing her. I hope this helps some of you. I posted much of this information before but it seemed to be dismissed a priori with few appearing to consider it legitimate or worthy of greater investigation. This is sad, because while everyone continues to talk of what to do for these poor FeLV, FIV, FIP and other sick cats, with a little effort this treatment is available, safe, effective, and inexpensive compared with the typical outlay for these diseases. Is it not worth trying for these cats before accepting that there is no viable cure? Personally, I would much prefer to attempt this protocol to eradicate a virus than to simply treat a cat's immune system just to give it a few extra months before the virus kills it anyway. It's really a no-brainer. You will do your vet a favor by asking him or her to undertake this for your cat. In fact, my vet now calls me to inquire about what other conditions she should be using the vitamin C treatment for and how much to use. In turn, another vet I had spoken with is now implementing this treatment in his practice. And even today as I write, a Mississippi vet is trying IV vitamin C for a cat with advanced histoplasmosis because his owner saw one of my posts and contacted me for the protocol. Skepticism and dismissal of oral, injectable and intravenous vitamin C as viable treatment options in dogs and cats with FeLV, FIV, FIP, panleukopenia, cancers, respiratory infections, parvovirus, urinary tract infections, etc. is costing them their lives. For a decade I have witnessed the miracle of Linus Pauling's high dose vitamin C/lysine protocol for reversing coronary heart disease in very sick people who were willing and open-minded enough to try it. Can we afford to be any less willing and open-minded when it comes to our cherished animal companions who have no voice? Sally Snyder Jewell Tower Laboratories Corporation www.HeartTech.com 1-877-TOWER-LABS Practicing Medicine Without a License? The Story of the Linus Pauling Therapy for Heart Disease, by Owen Fonorow and Sally Snyder Jewell _______________________________________________ Felvtalk mailing list Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org