Hello Maya,

So good to hear you have good news, at least for now. Our Tigger was in the 
same shape it seemed. My hubby and I had actually sort of said “so long baby” 
to him that evening, thinking he would not make it through the night. I was 
exhausted, physically and emotionally! I woke very early to my husband telling 
me not to step on him when I get out of bed – Tigger had managed to get himself 
from our living room into our bedroom. He could not get up on the bed, but he 
was lying on the floor next to my husband. Somehow it seemed he had turned a 
corner. He has improved so much ever since, and most importantly he seemed to 
be telling us that he wants to fight this disease, and I think your little 
fellow seems to be saying the same thing to you!

Best wishes to you and your kitty!

Ardy Robertson

 

 

From: Felvtalk [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Maya 
D'Alessio
Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2015 9:34 AM
To: Margo <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Stanozolol (Winstrol(R))

 

I got the vibe from the vet last night that we were going down hill, and I had 
lost a lot of hope. I woke up to a much improved cat though! His temperature is 
stable (still slightly high), he hasn't lost any weight, and his purr is back 
to normal. He is definitely feeling better, but that doesn't mean we are out of 
the woods. We just did a complete blood work; liver function and all that stuff 
looks good (exception of high bilirubin, but the vet wasn't concerned). He's 
peeing, and he even did a poop! Unfortunately his WBC, neutrophils and 
lymphocytes are all very low. Thankfully his RBC remains normal which is 
positive.

 

The vet is recommending doing AZT, this is a different vet than yesterday and 
she seems more open to talknig about things. She seemed open to calling Amani's 
vet to chat about Winstrol.

 

I'm still force feeding, and they want to stop the prednisolone to let his WBC 
regenerate I think. I'm a bit nervous about stopping it. We are staying on the 
doxy, with cevenia and mirtazipine.

 

Again, right now we mostly need to wait and re-check blood work in 48 hours.

 

On Wed, Oct 21, 2015 at 7:11 AM, Margo <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:



Hi Maya,

             Any improvement is good news ! How bad is the anemia? What is his 
PCV/HCT? Is it regenerative or non-regenerative? There are medications that can 
help with that, which your Vet may be comfortable using. This discusses the use 
of erythropoietin in cats with kidney failure, but anemia is anemia.

http://www.felinecrf.org/esas.htm

There's also a great yahoo list. I don't know how active it is anymore, but the 
files might help;

https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/Feline_Anemia/info

I know it's frustrating not to be able to treat the FeLV itself, but we CAN 
manage/treat the symptoms.

Best to Merlot, and you,

Margo

-----Original Message----- 
From: Maya D'Alessio 
Sent: Oct 20, 2015 8:12 PM 
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Stanozolol (Winstrol(R)) 

Good news; his temperature is down to a "high normal", bad news; he has an 
anemia murmur. The vet was not hearing me about Winstrol and he seemed in a bad 
mood. I'm hanging on to the decreased fever as a sign of good things. We will 
re-do blood work tomorrow and re-asses in the morning.

 

On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 6:28 PM, Lance <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

My FeLV+ girl Ember got five-on five-off interferon. I can’t remember if it was 
1ml or .5ml, but it wasn’t a large dose.

 

I seem to remember a vet at a specialized clinic telling me that we didn’t have 
to stagger it, but my “country vet” had prescribed it that way, and we stuck to 
it. 

 

AZT can cause serious blood abnormalities in cats. I don’t think it’s often 
used in treating FeLV because of that. 

 

Lance

 

On Oct 20, 2015, at 3:49 PM, Maya D'Alessio <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

You've been plenty helpful, thank you. What I need to figure out how to do, is 
accept the situation and be less emotional about it, no matter which way it 
goes, until the time comes. Right now I'm just so emotional, I keep 
flip-flopping between optimistic and hopeless.

 

Do you know with the interferon, what dose they are on? When you first started 
did you start immediately with the one week on, one week off, or was there a 
more intense initial period?

 

On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 4:45 PM, Margo <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:



   I remember researching AZT an deciding against it, but I don't recall why.  
My two boys have been on interferon for years (low dose one week on, one week 
off) and I've never seen any adverse effects, but when they're sick, they seem 
to perk up during the "on" weeks. The anti-nausea was likely Cerenia, which is 
being recognized for it's anti-inflammatory properties, as well.

He's improving. No need for any major decisions. That's really not a lot of 
drugs, all things considered :) It was two weeks until Gribs was eating 
normally, and seemed as if he might live. There really is no formula for mosr 
people. I always read "you'll know", but I'm not sure that's true. Sorry I 
can't be more help with that.

Margo

 

-----Original Message----- 
From: Maya D'Alessio 

Sent: Oct 20, 2015 1:56 PM 
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Stanozolol (Winstrol(R)) 

Oh wow, yes I am in Waterloo. Can you send me your vet's information and I will 
pass it along to my vet immediately.

 

He is mentioning AZT and interferon, but Merlot has a persistent fever and 
won't eat, I am assuming his body is not up to those drugs yet. He's currently 
on doxy, prednisolone and mirtazipine (appetite stimulant), and they gave him 
an antinauseant shot last night (cevinia I think).

 

Question to the larger group; my cat is uncomfortable (although better than 
yesterday), I have to force feed him and he's on a ton of drugs. How long is 
this feasible? How long should I let it go if we don't see improvement? How do 
you make that call. With my last cat, she deteriorated so rapidly and it was so 
dire that it was a pretty straight forward call.

 

On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 1:48 PM, Amani Oakley <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Maya,

Seriously, I have to wonder about some vets. What is he offering you that will 
help your cat??

Anyhow, all I can say is I am happy I have a supportive vet. I will send you 
some links to stuff about Winstrol, but it is hard to find since the mind-set 
you have encountered already, is all too common, even when our cats are dying 
and there are few realistic alternatives.

Most of the links I will send to you will not speak to the use of Winstrol 
specifically for FeLV, but speak to things like building up strength and 
improving appetite.

Here is the first - very generic.


http://www.petplace.com/article/drug-library/library/prescription/stanozolol-winstrol

Amani

P.S. - I also noticed you are not far from me. My vet is in Etobicoke, in the 
outskirts of Toronto. Perhaps your vet should call my vet?

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-- 

Maya D'Alessio

PhD student

B1 377B, x32320

Graduate Studies Endowment Fund Coordinator

Biology GSA Vice Chair

GSA Director At-Large

University of Waterloo


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Felvtalk mailing list
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-- 

Maya D'Alessio

PhD student

B1 377B, x32320

Graduate Studies Endowment Fund Coordinator

Biology GSA Vice Chair

GSA Director At-Large

University of Waterloo

_______________________________________________
Felvtalk mailing list
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
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_______________________________________________
Felvtalk mailing list
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
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-- 

Maya D'Alessio

PhD student

B1 377B, x32320

Graduate Studies Endowment Fund Coordinator

Biology GSA Vice Chair

GSA Director At-Large

University of Waterloo


_______________________________________________
Felvtalk mailing list
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





 

-- 

Maya D'Alessio

PhD student

B1 377B, x32320

Graduate Studies Endowment Fund Coordinator

Biology GSA Vice Chair

GSA Director At-Large

University of Waterloo

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