My vet told me that as long as they had good food, shelter, and lots of love if 
they were 1 year or older, they had a chance to throw it off.  Annie did and 
now at 8, she is a prima donna in good health.  Nitnoy did not make it because 
she had a lot of issues from her feral days, but she was with me for 3 years.  
He said keep the others vaccinated for FELV and they will not contract it from 
the positive cats.  so far it has been 8 years ad all is well.  I think 
sometimes the vets just do not want to deal with it and think you do not.  They 
tell you what they think you want to hear.  They should tell the possible 
problems and let you make the decision. 


---- Mercy Cats <[email protected]> wrote: 
> I just found out that a couple of young cats (nine months old or so) that had 
> been abandoned in a county park, and that I caught and took to a local humane 
> society last month, were euthanized because they were felv+.   The cats 
> probably wouldn't have survived the virus; they were emaciated and one had 
> lost the sight in one eye because of an untreated URI.  But the shelter tried 
> to tell me that felv is ALWAYS fatal, and I realize it's difficult to get 
> people to adopt + cats, but I know some adult cats can shake off the virus.  
> Our garage cat, Snowball, originally came to us from our veterinarian because 
> we were the only ones who would take a leuk+ cat.  That was in December 2008. 
>  At the time we had Harley who was dumped as an FeLV kitten.   Harley died 
> six weeks later.  Snowball tested negative for FeLV in August 2013 and again 
> in February 2014.   I've seen a few postings by people who have also had cats 
> go from (+) to (-).   Does this happen more often than most people think?   
> 
>                                         


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