since she is in heat, can you keep her seperate from males?  give her lots of 
love and attention and use Felway to keep the stress level down.  i spayed both 
of my positive girls.  the vet said to keep them seperate for a week so she 
could heal.  i have had no problems with either girl.  Annie and Nitnoy are 
treated just like the others, go in and out, eat Blue buffalo (all prefer the 
duck formula) and have the run of the house.  all my girls are healthy with 2 
exceptions:  Homey had urine crystals, would not eat special diet foods which 
prompted the change to Blue Buffalo which has no wheat, soy or corn.  she is 
doing much better now.  Bob had a bladder infection and is on antibiotics (last 
3 days) and doing better.
i would say let her settle in with your other cats and then spay her.
---- Heather <[email protected]> wrote: 
> Hello,
> 
> Seeking input...we have a beautiful young Siamese rescue kitty who tested
> FIV/FELV positive (the FELV was that controversial "light" positive) and is
> awaiting retest, of course we did not want to stress her immune system so
> were waiting to spay her (just found her a couple of weeks ago) but I was
> worried this would likely happen, she is in heat.  I would guess that is
> also a stress to her system, but am not really sure what we should do.
> 
> I am a rescuer & highly involved with feral cats/TNR so spay/neuter is
> always a priority but of course the hopes of clearing the FELV is right now
> the biggest hope for this little girl's life....any input is appreciated.  I
> asked my vet and she really wasn't certain what to advise & is going to get
> back to me.
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> Heather
> _______________________________________________
> Felvtalk mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


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