Marsha

This is same sort of thing that Zander eventually died from at age 7. In his 
case, it was dilated cardiomyopathy, but the vet also commented on the 
extensive scar tissue in the heart.

Someone else on the chatline mentioned their FeLV cat died from cardiomyopathy.

Researching this on line (like so many cat-related conditions) shows, once 
again, how little is known about cats since almost every site you go to just 
says that most causes of heart disease in cats is unknown. I haven't seen a 
study, such as the one you are looking for, linking FeLV with heart issues. 
However, there is information regarding the fact that when the FeLV causes 
anemia, this can have an effect on the heart rhythm, heart sounds, heart 
effectiveness, etc. but of course, none of this means that there is necessarily 
a physical effect on the heart - other than the "thinner" blood causing the 
heart to not beat properly or need to beat faster to distribute blood which is 
reduced in its ability to distribute oxygen.


I was able to find one cite 
http://www.petplace.com/article/cats/diseases-conditions-of-cats/heart-blood-vessels/dilated-cardiomyopathy-in-cats-dcm
 which set out some causes of dilated cardiomyopathy and include:



Myocarditis (inflammation of the myocardium)

Severe global myocardial ischemia (lack of blood supply to the heart - what 
Zander had during his FeLV crisis)


It's always possible that the condition is genetic, but given the fact that 
FeLV can cause such a wide range of conditions such as lymphoma, etc., in the 
body, I would bet there is a connection with the scar tissue in the heart as 
well, particularly when one of the possible causes is inflammation of the heart 
muscle.

Amani

From: Felvtalk [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marsha
Sent: November-27-15 1:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Grieving, and need to understand about felv

Amani, do you know of any references I can look at regarding FeLV effect on the 
heart?  Brock has restrictive cardiomyopathy, which results from scar tissue or 
protein deposits in the heart muscle.  The vet thought it could be congenital.  
Are there any studies showing percentage of FeLV+ cats with heart damage?

Marsha

On 11/27/2015 12:53 PM, Amani Oakley wrote:

Anne, there is just nothing at all you did wrong. I sympathize completely with 
your guilt, because I too wish I had known more about Winstrol BEFORE Zander 
decompensated so badly. I think that because he did, the virus was allowed to 
continue attacking his body and left scarring on the heart - the cause of his 
death at 7 years.


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