I would wonder, too if these cats were truly positive to begin with. I also 
wonder how long they treated & how long they waited after they were treated to 
do the tests.
Also, steroids can help alleviate & mask many  symptoms. I know my cat with 
Stomatitis can be drooling & have severely irritated gums, but after a shot of 
DEPOMEDROL he looks like he's been cured in no time. Unfortunately, after a 
month the effects wear off.

Beth
Dont Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org   

--- On Fri, 4/16/10, jbero tds.net <jb...@tds.net> wrote:

From: jbero tds.net <jb...@tds.net>
Subject: [Felvtalk] Possible therapy for felv
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Date: Friday, April 16, 2010, 12:53 PM

Okay, I am always questioning people that claim a cure, but here is a small
study done that caused a man to patent the treatment concerning felv.  This
a group dedicated to looking into any avenue that may help our little ones,
so I'm putting this out there.

I copied and pasted this from the patent:

notes:

1) One cat with FELV(+)/FIV(+) died without the treatment as a control.

2) Treatments: Cats were injected intramuscularly with 20 mg DEPOMEDROL
(antiinflammatory steroid) and dispensed with 1,200 mg powdered Nacetyl
cysteine(NAC), 200 IU of Vitamin E, 500 mg of Vitamin C and one PET TAB/day.


3) It takes from 3 weeks to 6 weeks for the cats to turn retrovirus positive
reaction to negative after the treatment.

4) The symptoms of Champage, Precious, and Missy such as dental problems
bloody diarrhea, and loss of appetite completely subsided after the
treatment with steroids/antioxidants. The symptoms of Sampson such as
vomiting, gum disease, and loss of appetite completely reversed after the
treatment. Josey's symptoms of lung problem, loss of appetite, and gum
infection cleared up following the treatment. The cats were maintained on
PET TABS following the treatment with steroid/antioxidants.

5) At the conclusion of the test all cats remained FIV or leukemia virus
negative.

6) Blood was drawn for analysis from four of the cats treated (Sampson,
Josey, Patch, and Bud). The analysis included cell cultures, mitogen
stimulation, and polymerase chain reaction assay for the retovirus. All
tests indicated the cats were fully cured as none indicated any sign of the
virus.

These cat experiments are the first to demonstrate that AIDS can be cured in
an in vivo model.

That's it.  If anyone's got any ideas about it or history with it, I'd love
to hear it.


Jenny
_______________________________________________
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org



      
_______________________________________________
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org

Reply via email to