If you are worried about exposing your negative cats to FELV, then I would insist on the IFA, then you would not be second guessing yourself all the time and still have that worry in the back of your mind. ---- Jannes Taylor <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello to all, > Three months ago I rescued a cat that I found out in the field next to our > house > starving to death and did not energy to even purr or play. She tested > positive > for felv. Three months later this kitty who I named Amber is like a different > cat. She is rotten, well fed, and full of energy. As some of you my recall, > my > husband built her her own palace to live in which is in our basement. I have > three healthy cats upstaris and am not willinig to risk exposing them to a > felv > cat. > > I took Amber back to the vet this morning and the Elisa test was negative! I > asked the vet about getting her the IFA test and he did not even know what it > was! I had printed off information re the test and he did read it. However, > he > thinks she does not need the IFA test since she tested negative. > Should I go ahead and bring Amber upstaris with the rest of the gang or still > insist on the IFA test?? > Jannes > _______________________________________________ > Felvtalk mailing list > [email protected] > http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
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