Re: Dr. Ward's consult

2006-11-26 Thread Lernermichelle
 
I have usually dealt with at least 2 vets at a time-- a very close one for  
simple matters, and one farther away who is an internist or who I trust more 
for  more serious things. 
 
Dianne, I am sure you must know this already, but lymphoma is usually not  
cured.  At best it is held in remission for a while.  Every once in a  while it 
does seem to get cured-- cats five years out with no symptoms-- but  this is 
less likely for a positive cat.  I have heard of positives getting  a year or 
two out of chemo, and I think there is one out there that is  approaching 2 
years and still has no symptoms, knock on wood, but that is rare.  It is 
usually 
a best case scenario of months not years.  Positives respond  as well to chemo 
as negatives, but their remissions tend not to last as  long.  Hopefully Asia 
will be the exception. 
 
Michelle
 
In a message dated 11/26/2006 1:03:12 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

but it is ok now, I won't be going back to him with her...and if I do it  
will be convenience.  He is less than a mile from my house and I can  usually 
get 
in immediately and get a discount as I do rescue work.  So  there are some 
benefits there but I know he is not the best vet around.   Actually there are 
not many in this area I am happy dealing with.  Last  year was a horrible year 
for me and my babies.  I lost 3 Shih Tzu's and a  cat from April to October, it 
is a horror story and a long one.  Each pet  had a different illness and 2 
were prolonged and 2 were sudden.  (all  part of why I was so devastated when I 
got the first diagnosis...just went  numb)
 
All for now and good nightand good night...smile
 
Dianne and Asia



 


Re: Felv+/FIV+ policy for rescues

2006-11-26 Thread Kelley Saveika

Yes, I agree this is bad.  I hate it when rescues do this.  Even Nathan
Winograd, who is against testing, states that the one thing you should not
do is selective testing.  Either test none or all.

I think people do this because they really do not understand the disease, or
have outdated information.  I tried to educate my previous rescue group
regarding FELV and it fell on deaf ears.


On 11/25/06, Dianne K Perry, Ph.D. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


 Here I have learned that the policy with rescue cat groups is that they
test 1 in the litter of feral cats.my Asia did not get tested but her
brother did.he tested negative but her paperwork states she was tested a
year agoand was negative.  When I called that vet yesterday I was told
no we do not have a record of her being tested, we only test one in a litter
and it was her brother that got tested, Pierre.

I think the all should be tested.

Dianne

- Original Message -
*From:* catatonya [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*To:* felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
*Sent:* Saturday, November 25, 2006 7:06 PM
*Subject:* Re: Felv+/FIV+ policy for rescues


I would not test.  I just haven't been on list lately.  I wish testing had
never started.  Vaccinate and adopt is what I would do.  FIV and Felv should
be treated as any other illness a cat might come down with.
t

*Kelley Saveika [EMAIL PROTECTED]* wrote:

Wow, this is a lot of information to process. Thanks everyone!

I know there are a lot of people who advocate NOT testing and was
surprised to find no one spoke up on that angle.   One of my favorite animal
people, Nathan Winograd, does not test for FIV and only tests for FELV
because the board insists.

I know most of the well known feral cat groups do not test cats who appear
healthy, but that's a different can of worms.

I will say that all cats that come into rescue are initially tested,
because that is what the shelters around here do.  I have set up that I will
require owner surrenders provide proof of negative combo test.

I'm not sure about the statements about eventually having lots of FELV+
cats to deal with.  In this area I know people who have been doing rescue
for years and not come across a single case or maybe one or 2.

What I don't want is for a foster to end up in the position I did, when I
had a kitten test light + and no one, from the director on down, could tell
me what to do, what was going to happen to the cats, etc.

Fortunately she and the rest of that litter later tested negative.


On 11/12/06, Kelley Saveika [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi guys,

 If you were establishing a rescue, what kind of felv/fiv testing policy
 would you use?  If the cats were positive for either or both, what would you
 do?

 Thanks for your input.

 Kelley

 --
 Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!

 http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20




--
Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!

http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20






--
Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!

http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20


Re: Felv+/FIV+ policy for rescues

2006-11-26 Thread Kelley Saveika

On 11/26/06, TenHouseCats [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


i think that part of the problem is the over-riding lack of
information mentioned so often (by me, too, if i recall): for a
long time it was assumed that if mom was positive, or if one kitten
was positive, then the whole litter was i'm not even sure that
that wasn't the case at one point--i know that mixed litters seem to
be showing up far more often now than they did five years ago and,
thankfully, more kittens who initially test positive are testing
negative later on.




Unfortunately people still assume this.  Misinformation abounds, and often
people don't want to be educated.  (I think part of it is not spending the
money for additional combo tests).  I would probably still assume this had I
not found this list (thanks again yall).

something that all rescues/shelters should know is that idexx, at

least, has a great discount program for 501(c)3s--i'm fuzzy on the
current details, but it used to be that you had to buy in bulk (30
test kits, which during kitten season any group can easily go
through!), with each test costing under $7/per for the combo test.
most shelters/rescues that deal with dogs know how to draw bloods for
heartworm testing, so it's not out of the question for them to do
their own blood draws for kitties. vet techs will often donate their
time to do the blood draws, too, if you ask around...




We are so small I am not sure I could convince a vet tech.  We don't deal
with dogs (yet) either.  Fortunately I can get a combo test at the wellness
clinic for $16.  I usually just take the whole litter in at once.

and it's important, again, to distinquish between FIV and FeLV--i

don't test for the former, but will for the latter

perhaps finding out the current specifics on the idexx program (and
others, if they exist) is something someone could take on, then
provide the info to the rest of us to distribute to rescues/shelters
in our areas

MC



Good idea.


Re: Felv+/FIV+ policy for rescues

2006-11-26 Thread Jennifer Phaewryn O'Gwynn


  something that all rescues/shelters should know is that idexx, at
  least, has a great discount program for 501(c)3s--i'm fuzzy on the
  current details, but it used to be that you had to buy in bulk (30
  test kits, which during kitten season any group can easily go
  through!), with each test costing under $7/per for the combo test.
  most shelters/rescues that deal with dogs know how to draw bloods for
  heartworm testing, so it's not out of the question for them to do
  their own blood draws for kitties. vet techs will often donate their
  time to do the blood draws, too, if you ask around...

The thing is, I believe you only need ONE blood drop to do the SNAP test,
and you can pull that using a lancet on the ear flap, just like if you
wanted to do a blood glucose reading for diabetes. So... no vet needed, no
vet tech needed, anyone can be taught to use a lancet on the ear to get a
blood droplet. The problem is that everyone's always still doing things the
hard way because it's habit, and no one wants to use modern technology and
methods. There is NO NEED to draw blood from a vein for tests that only
require a drop of blood, this includes the test for anemia, and any SNAP
tests.

Webpages that show lancets, getting the blood droplet, etc:
http://www.sugarcats.net/sites/harry/bgtest.htm
http://maxshouse.com/bgtest[1].mpg

Phaewryn

VT low cost SpayNeuter, and Emergency Financial Assistance for cat owners:
http://ucat.us/VermontLowCost.html
Special Needs Cat Resources: http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html


Re: add to CLS - Valley, Susan's baby (Nina)

2006-11-26 Thread catatonya
Susan,  My condolences as well.  I was hoping Valley had turned the corner.  
I'm so sorry.
   
  tonya

Leslie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Susan,
  I am so sorry to hear about Valley's loss.  I was so hoping for his continued 
recovery.  Too much heartbreak in your corner of late.  I hope that your 
students can help you heal, you are giving both them and your cats an amazing 
gift in bringing these two worlds together. 
   
  Sleep sweet, Valley.
   
  Leslie 
   

  G. Lane wrote:
 Susan's away from her computer,  as it's Thanksgiving and she doesn't
 have a computer at home. 

 But I just wanted to write and tell you guys that she lost beloved
 Valley today.  He's an adult FELV flame point Siamese, and he died
 tonight probably from a disease caused by his FELV condition.  His 
 hematocrit was very low, and today he started having trouble
 breathing. She can address the details better than I, but I just
 wanted to put this out on the list..

 Valley was a wonderful,  gorgeous baby, who had been with her for 
 maybe 3 years (?), and served as a Library Cat at the Blind School
 where Susan is Librarian.  He will be very much missed.

 Sleep soft, sweet Valley.




Re: another despair - prayer for Rikki - ARF/FIP?

2006-11-26 Thread catatonya
These mats are poisonous to cats?  Do you mean if they are ingested or just in 
the room?
  t

Kelly L [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  At 03:55 PM 11/18/2006, you wrote:

Just got back from the vets. Tiger is recovering from the surgery, he is here 
in my ICUIt is those big square mats that look like puzzle edges to put 
together, they also come in colorsFloor mats. I wil scan the picture and 
email them,,the one from last year and the ones from this year,
Very expensive mats,,,
Kelly


  What is the story with the mats?  I know Mai Mai was deathly ill after eating 
and throwing up a hand warmer cover but I haven't heard about foam mats.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
 from the shelter of compassion 
and pity, you will have men who 
 will deal likewise with their 
fellow man.
  St. Francis

   - Original Message - 
  
   From: Kelly L 
  
   To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
  
   Sent: Saturday, November 18, 2006 5:24 PM
  
   Subject: Re: another despair - prayer for Rikki - ARF/FIP?

  
   At 03:19 PM 11/18/2006, you wrote:


  
   I agree.. I did not know how dangerous those foam mats from Costco areMy 
Tiger has just had his second surgery, the mats are gone,,my pocketbook is dry, 
We are all here to share and help each other,,
  
   Kelly



   Please know that no one is picking on you.  We are asking so many questions 
out of total concern for you and your little ones.  Each of use brings some 
different experiences to the table.  I was never very aware of the dangers of 
philodendrons with cats until Dixie started showing some interest in house 
plants.  No other cat had.  Needless to say, I am having to re-home some plants 
I really like.  Today she reacted very badly to a cologne a friend had 
on...she wanted nothing to do with him and she is a very social cat.  
She even hissed at him and, in the almost two years I have known her, I have 
never heard her  hiss at a person.  Arsenic is organic as are a large number of 
poisons.  And people have awful reactions to somethings like new carpet fumes 
or glues.  ls it possible that someone has used an insecticide or something 
that you would not know about?  
  
   
   
   We all know how much you love your cats and what good care you take of them. 
 Please don't take any of the questions or comments wrong.  
  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
  
from the shelter of 
compassion and pity, you will have men who 
  
will deal likewise with 
their fellow man.
  
 St. 
Francis 
   - Original Message -   
   From: Susan Hoffman   
   To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org   
   Sent: Saturday, November 18, 2006 5:00 PM   
   Subject: RE: another despair - prayer for Rikki - ARF/FIP?
  
   It is very easy to get paranoid with FIP.  I always worry about it if 
someone misses a meal or seems to be sleeping more than usual.  But don't let 
yourself be so convinced that everyone who has died in the past month or two or 
three is the result of FIP.  I think you have something else going on.  Some 
may have had FIP but others?  Keep looking.  I think there is more to it.
  
  
   Dry FIP usually takes at least 2-4 months from the first little sign of 
trouble -- lethargy, loss of appetite -- before the cat dies.  Weight loss is 
gradual.  At the end the cat is truly anorexic in appearance but it takes time 
to get there.  Neurological signs do not occur in all cases.  And it is highly 
unusual to lose so many in such a short period of time.  Not unheard of but 
rare and usually involving a commercial cattery with a lot of questionable 
breeding practices.  

  
  
   You need to start doing a necropsy on everyone who dies.  That is the only 
way you can be certain if it was dry FIP.  Until then, don't make that 
assumption.  Otherwise you may miss something that is treatable or preventable.
  
   Hideyo Yamamoto [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
   Susan, none of my cats had a rapid onset of the illness– I knew that 
something was wrong with Naomi before my vet event thought something was wrong 
for about two months.. she thought it was nutricious thing – but she never 
really got that big.. it was very subtle, and chronic.. and the same was Dharma 
– they ate okay, and move around just fine.. just not as active as a kitten 
should be.. if you know what I mean.. Dharma was doing very well when Naomi was 
sick, but gradually she became a bit inactive – and started running low grade 

Re: Dr. Ward's consult

2006-11-26 Thread Lernermichelle
 
It is curable in humans because they use more chemo, I think. I have heard  
of dogs being cured, and I have heard of cats years out, who could be called  
cured. It just is not very common with cats, and even less common with 
positives  because their remissions are shorter.  In positives, it is their  
compromised immune system that fosters the lymphoma-- FeLV+ cats are 600 times  
more 
likely to get lymphoma than negatives.  I think that the remissions  must be 
shorter because the FeLV that made the cat susceptible to lymphoma in  the 
first 
place is still there and brings it back.  
 
I am sorry if I took hope away from you.  I struggled with whether or  not to 
say anything, because you seem so happy about her progress.  But I  think you 
should be happy about her progress, but just know that her time is  probably 
limited, though hopefully not too limited.  I think that it is  reasonable to 
hope for a good 6 months to a year, and to hope for even more  while knowing 
it may not happen.  I did not want you to be shocked if she  comes out of 
remission in a few months. Remember, though, that there are other  drugs to try 
if/when she does, which can give her more time.
 
Michelle
 
In a message dated 11/26/2006 11:12:17 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

no, I guess I did not know it was not curable.  My mom had lymphoma  and hers 
has been in remission since 1999.
 
I have been reading about the various lengths of remission but did not  
really realize it was not curable.  
 
Dianne



 


Re: OT: my feral calico mama Angelica is back!!

2006-11-26 Thread Marylyn
I hope the AC warned her and asked her to warn her friends about your 
neighbor.  I have a feral missing and it is the most awful feeling.  I am so 
glad Angelica is back home.







If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
from the shelter of 
compassion and pity, you will have men who
will deal likewise with 
their fellow man.
 St. 
Francis
- Original Message - 
From: cindy reasoner [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2006 5:50 PM
Subject: Re: OT: my feral calico mama Angelica is back!!



Hideyo,

I am so glad that Angelica is back.  That is wonderful
news.

Cindy Reasoner

--- Hideyo Yamamoto
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


Hi, everyone, I just wanted to tell you that I just
saw my missing
calico mama, angelica waiting for me on my porch -
after talking to AC,
and haven't seen her for the past 4 days, I was so
convninced that she
was not with us anymore after my neighbor poisoning
cats in my
neighborhood -- cannot express how relieved and glad
to see her during
this despair time.. moments like this gives me a
reason why I do what I
do for my ferals..thank you for all your prayers...








Do you Yahoo!?
Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail beta.
http://new.mail.yahoo.com






Re: To Kelley re. floors

2006-11-26 Thread Marylyn
The sealer can add the shine that the shellac adds.  Check under Acid blush 
and concrete stain on the internet and disregard what they say about only 
pros can put it down.  Remember that the more the shine the slippery the 
service so perhaps some sort of sand can be added







If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
from the shelter of 
compassion and pity, you will have men who
will deal likewise with 
their fellow man.
 St. 
Francis
- Original Message - 
From: wendy [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2006 11:43 PM
Subject: To Kelley re. floors



Hey Kelley,

My husband and I tiled our house ourselves this past
spring and summer.  We did almost the whole house,
except for the master bedroom, master closet-pretty
small, and one of the other bedrooms.  Our whole house
is a little over 1500 square feet, so it was quite a
job, but we did it, and it looks great.  I would say
it cost under $4000, but we picked out porcelain tile
and what we liked.  It could have been done for about
$2000-$3000 had we gone cheaper on the tile.  Also, I
went to a friend's house last month that had the
stained concrete like Phaewryn was talking about, and
it looked absolutely fantastic.  They stained it a
brownish color, and the concrete had been etched
(scored) to look like large tiles, 2x2 or bigger, and
then covered with a really shiny shellac.  It looked
GREAT, and I bet it was not expensive.  The only thing
about concrete is that it's porous, so the shellac had
to also needs to be a sealer.

:)
Wendy

--- Kelley Saveika [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


I really want tile, but it is SO EXPENSIVE.

On 11/22/06, Jennifer Phaewryn O'Gwynn
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  I've heard horror stories about wood laminate,
the cat/dog pee eats
 through the finish and destroys it.

 Phaewryn

 Please adopt a cat from Little Cheetah Cat
Rescue!!!
 http://ucat.us/adopt.html
 Low cost SpayNeuter services in VT, and Emergency
Financial Assistance
 for cat owners:
 http://ucat.us/VermontLowCost.html
 Special Needs Cat Resources:
http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html
 The Sofa Poem: http://ucat.us/sofapoem.html
 Find us on PETFINDER!
http://petfinder.com/shelters/VT44.html




--
Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!

http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20







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Pepper died

2006-11-26 Thread Candace Doler
I just wanted to let you know that Pepper died a few hours ago. He
started getting better with this current episode but was not so good
earlier today.

 I was not expecting him to go so suddenly. I was not at home at the
time so not sure what happened.

I want to thank everyone for their advice and support.

This group is great for those of us who want to take responsibility for
the health care of our pets and give them the best chance possible for a
good outcome.

 

Thank you all

Candace



Re: You are my support group-please add Schumacher to the CLS

2006-11-26 Thread Marylyn
This is so awful for you.  I am sorry.  But remember that Schumacher is close 
and loves you dearly. 






 If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
 from the shelter of compassion 
and pity, you will have men who 
 will deal likewise with their 
fellow man.
  St. Francis
  - Original Message - 
  From: catatonya 
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
  Sent: Saturday, November 25, 2006 6:38 PM
  Subject: Re: You are my support group-please add Schumacher to the CLS


  I'm so sorry for your loss, Brenda.

  tonya

  Tim Lyons [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know I only post to this group when I have a tragedy, but I read almost 
all the posts online daily.  I feel like you all are my support group although 
I don't have any FeLV+ cats any more.  I lost my last one in June.

Anyway, our FIV+ Schumacher as gone to Rainbow Bridge today.  About 6 weeks 
ago he went to the vet because he was a little depressed and wasn't eating 
well.  The bloodwork showed kidney problems (elevated BUN  creatinine) and 
below normal PCV.  He spent 5 days in the hospital and the vet pulled him 
through.  He's been on prednisolone, cyproheptadine, Pepsid AC, Procrit  sub-Q 
fluids.  Over the weekend, he just took a nose dive and wouldn't eat or drink 
anything.  He was drooling and gagging at the sight of any food.

I took him back to the vet this morning and she didn't think anythig else 
could be done.  His anemia appeared to be gone, but he was just very depressed 
and vocalizing (normally quiet) alot when I tried to hold him.  He had clearly 
had enough of the needles  pills.  The vet recommend PTS and I decided it was 
the best thing.

He was a very loving orange tabby with a little cattitude on the side and 
was my husband's favorite.  This is never easy and it's already been a rough 
year.  We've lost 2 others since June.  Please add our Schumacher to the CLS as 
a non-positive.

Thanks for always being there to listen when I need you all.


Brenda



re: blood testing for FeLV etc

2006-11-26 Thread TenHouseCats

from a vet tech pal:


Hi MC,

Nope, the info is not accurate.  You need 3 drops of blood to do a Snap test
and the easiest way to get it is with a 1cc syringe and 25 Ga. needle.  We
usually use one of the back legs for this, but with small kittens we use the
jugular.  Using a lancet will almost always give you one only one drop of
blood, which is only enough for testing blood glucose, and getting that drop
is not always as easy as it sounds.  Even for professionals.

The test for anemia, a PCV or hematocrit, uses a lot more than a few drops
of blood.  We get this by using only a 25 Ga. needle, no syringe.  The
needle slips easily into a vein (usually!) and you remove the needle once
the hub is about half full of blood. The blood is then transferred to a
small, thin tube. In order to get enough blood for a hematocrit from an ear
you would have to use a lancet multiple times, or be working on a cat with a
bleeding disorder.


 The thing is, I believe you only need ONE blood drop to do the SNAP test,
 and you can pull that using a lancet on the ear flap, just like if you
 wanted to do a blood glucose reading for diabetes. So... no vet needed,

no

 vet tech needed, anyone can be taught to use a lancet on the ear to get a
 blood droplet. The problem is that everyone's always still doing things

the

 hard way because it's habit, and no one wants to use modern technology

and

 methods. There is NO NEED to draw blood from a vein for tests that only
 require a drop of blood, this includes the test for anemia, and any SNAP
 tests.


--
Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892



Re: OT: Happy Thanksgiving guys

2006-11-26 Thread Marylyn
A mouse dumb enough to come around a place with cats needs to be removed from 
the genetic pool.And they are just protecting you from those invaders.  :)))






 If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
 from the shelter of compassion 
and pity, you will have men who 
 will deal likewise with their 
fellow man.
  St. Francis
  - Original Message - 
  From: ETrent 
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
  Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2006 2:27 AM
  Subject: Re: OT: Happy Thanksgiving guys


  euw.  i've been up late reading...heard a commotion in the den a bit ago 
but i figure the kids are just playing.  had to get up to get a drink of water 
and saw four cats sitting around staring at othello who was busy chomping away 
at something.  got my water and thought -- what IS that he is chewing on?  i 
know i heard a crunch.  hellloit's a mouse :-/  they just can't 
understand why i would get rid of the source of their delight and 
entertainmenttheir early thanksgiving snack!  oh well...i've never had to 
worry too much about mice in this house even if there is a huge field behind 
the house.

  elizabeth

  In a message dated 11/23/06 01:53:49 Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:
I count you all in my blessings too.

Gina, Tigger, Taylor, Bob and Pippin

ETrent [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Thank you - and a Happy Thanksgiving to you.  I am very blessed indeed to 
have found this group.

  much love to all from elizabeth, phelix, antonio, tiffany, lexie, 
shakiti, othello, tori, and mama kitty


  In a message dated 11/22/06 18:14:06 Central Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] writes:
Hey guys, 

I just wanted to wish everyone a very Happy 
Thanksgiving, and let all of you know that I give 
thanks for having you in my life.  You are all a 
blessing, not to mention collectively, an enormous 
wealth of knowledge.  May you be blessed for your 
selflessness and kindness. 

:) 
Wendy 





 
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Re: OT Help, I am so embarrassed

2006-11-26 Thread Marylyn
Me too.  I wouldn't have it.  Pine floors with lots of shellac works.






 If you have men who will 
exclude any of God's creatures
 from the shelter of compassion 
and pity, you will have men who 
 will deal likewise with their 
fellow man.
  St. Francis
  - Original Message - 
  From: Jennifer Phaewryn O'Gwynn 
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2006 6:58 PM
  Subject: Re: OT Help, I am so embarrassed


  I've heard horror stories about wood laminate, the cat/dog pee eats through 
the finish and destroys it.

  Phaewryn

  Please adopt a cat from Little Cheetah Cat Rescue!!! 
http://ucat.us/adopt.html 
  Low cost SpayNeuter services in VT, and Emergency Financial Assistance for 
cat owners:
  http://ucat.us/VermontLowCost.html
  Special Needs Cat Resources: http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html 
  The Sofa Poem: http://ucat.us/sofapoem.html
  Find us on PETFINDER! http://petfinder.com/shelters/VT44.html

Re: Felv+/FIV+ policy for rescues

2006-11-26 Thread TenHouseCats

unless things have changed significantly in the past couple of years,
all snaps that i know of (including idexx) require more than a single
drop--otherwise, far more shelters/rescues WOULD be doing them
themselves. if you have newer info, i'd love to see it. i know that
there are LESS expensive tests than the idexx out there, tho it's the
one that all but one of the high-volume rescue vets i know of use



The thing is, I believe you only need ONE blood drop to do the SNAP test,
and you can pull that using a lancet on the ear flap, just like if you
wanted to do a blood glucose reading for diabetes. So... no vet needed, no
vet tech needed, anyone can be taught to use a lancet on the ear to get a
blood droplet. The problem is that everyone's always still doing things the
hard way because it's habit, and no one wants to use modern technology and
methods. There is NO NEED to draw blood from a vein for tests that only
require a drop of blood, this includes the test for anemia, and any SNAP
tests.

Webpages that show lancets, getting the blood droplet, etc:
http://www.sugarcats.net/sites/harry/bgtest.htm
http://maxshouse.com/bgtest[1].mpg

Phaewryn

VT low cost SpayNeuter, and Emergency Financial Assistance for cat owners:
http://ucat.us/VermontLowCost.html
Special Needs Cat Resources:
http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html



--
Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892



Re: Dr. Ward's consult/Michelle

2006-11-26 Thread Dianne K Perry, Ph.D.
Michelle,

I have dealt with enough cancer in humans and dogs to know there are not 
guaranteesbut I always try to stay as positive as I can given any 
circumstances.  I do have my down times and also try to be realistic. 

My goal for Asia is to give her the best life she can have for the longest she 
can have it, whatever it may be.I am just mostly happy at this stage that I 
thought it through and did some research before euthanizing and that we can do 
some treatments to assist her have some quality of life.

I have done doggie hospice with 3 dogs since 2003, 2 of them last year and one 
was a cancerous tumor on his spine at C2 and one was Chronic Renal Failure that 
we treated for 2 yrs.  these two were brothers and I had them since birth.  I 
also had there mother and she had liver disease which I also treated for 2 yrs. 
along with heart disease.  My cat that I had for 15 yrs was a diabetic the last 
5 yrs. of her life and I gave her shots am and pm daily.

Not that I want to do anymore hospice with any living thing but I have had the 
experience with dogs and also my father.  My husband also had cancer and fought 
it for 2 yrs.  My mother is a 4 time cancer survivor who is now 82 and going 
strong.

I appreciate you wanting me to be informed and appreciate your honesty about 
the disease.  I do lots of research on the diseases of my animals and my human 
family members and try to stay as informed as possible.  I am also still 
grieving last years numerous deaths in my family so it was very difficult to 
euthanize Asia and it was also very difficult to face the possible caretaking 
again, but after a couple days of consideration and being sad, my decision was 
made to go forward with another opinion and treatment.

So that is where I am with this, I will treat her as long as it is helping her, 
if she no longer has a quality of life then I will give her the loving peace of 
heaven.

Thanks,
Dianne
  - Original Message - 
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
  Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2006 4:36 PM
  Subject: Re: Dr. Ward's consult


  It is curable in humans because they use more chemo, I think. I have heard of 
dogs being cured, and I have heard of cats years out, who could be called 
cured. It just is not very common with cats, and even less common with 
positives because their remissions are shorter.  In positives, it is their 
compromised immune system that fosters the lymphoma-- FeLV+ cats are 600 times 
more likely to get lymphoma than negatives.  I think that the remissions must 
be shorter because the FeLV that made the cat susceptible to lymphoma in the 
first place is still there and brings it back.  

  I am sorry if I took hope away from you.  I struggled with whether or not to 
say anything, because you seem so happy about her progress.  But I think you 
should be happy about her progress, but just know that her time is probably 
limited, though hopefully not too limited.  I think that it is reasonable to 
hope for a good 6 months to a year, and to hope for even more while knowing it 
may not happen.  I did not want you to be shocked if she comes out of remission 
in a few months. Remember, though, that there are other drugs to try if/when 
she does, which can give her more time.

  Michelle

  In a message dated 11/26/2006 11:12:17 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] writes:
no, I guess I did not know it was not curable.  My mom had lymphoma and 
hers has been in remission since 1999.

I have been reading about the various lengths of remission but did not 
really realize it was not curable.  

Dianne


Re: Pepper died

2006-11-26 Thread Sherry DeHaan
Candace I am so sorry about your sweet Pepper.Hugs to you
  Sherry

Candace Doler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just wanted to let you know that Pepper died a few hours ago. 
He started getting better with this current episode but was not so good earlier 
today.
   I was not expecting him to go so suddenly. I was not at home at the time so 
not sure what happened.
  I want to thank everyone for their advice and support.
  This group is great for those of us who want to take responsibility for the 
health care of our pets and give them the best chance possible for a good 
outcome.
   
  Thank you all
  Candace



 
-
Access over 1 million songs - Yahoo! Music Unlimited.

Re: Pepper died

2006-11-26 Thread Jennifer Phaewryn O'Gwynn
I'm so sorry for your loss Candace.

Phaewryn

Please save Whitey! http://ucat.us/Whitey.html
VT low cost SpayNeuter, and Emergency Financial Assistance for cat owners:
http://ucat.us/VermontLowCost.html
Special Needs Cat Resources: http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html


Re: blood testing for FeLV etc

2006-11-26 Thread Jennifer Phaewryn O'Gwynn
Humm, ok, maybe it is 3 drops. I swear, I've seen vets do it and they only used 
a
drop, but maybe they were not doing it right.

Phaewryn

Please save Whitey! http://ucat.us/Whitey.html
VT low cost SpayNeuter, and Emergency Financial Assistance for cat owners:
http://ucat.us/VermontLowCost.html
Special Needs Cat Resources: http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html




RE: Pepper died

2006-11-26 Thread Tracy Weese
I'm sorry you lost Pepper


Tracy 
- Original Message - 
From: Candace Doler 
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: 11/26/2006 8:31:53 PM 
Subject: Pepper died


I just wanted to let you know that Pepper died a few hours ago. He started 
getting better with this current episode but was not so good earlier today.
 I was not expecting him to go so suddenly. I was not at home at the time so 
not sure what happened.
I want to thank everyone for their advice and support.
This group is great for those of us who want to take responsibility for the 
health care of our pets and give them the best chance possible for a good 
outcome.
 
Thank you all
Candace

Genevieve

2006-11-26 Thread Sherry DeHaan
Thank you all for your prayers and good thoughts for beautiful Vitter Vits.I 
have been going to visit her everyday all this week.Last night Dr. Jen took her 
to her house and to the clinic today to help her along with trying to fight 
this URI along with Otitis in her left ear.Jen is trying to talk me into 
bringing her home to be with me after she gets her feeling better.I just don't 
think that I can do it.I have the 3 fiv+ and the neg and am so glad that they 
are clear of felv.I would feel aweful if one of them or any at all might get 
it. I know they ALL have lived amongst the felv+ but I just am so afraid to 
risk it. But I sure do love that beautiful baby girl.I cry when I hold her and 
she sings that beautiful song of purrs. :) Just thinking about her now is 
bringing tears.She has taken a special place in my heart,that will be so broken 
when it is her time to go.I am amazed my heart is still working after all the 
loss I have had to deal with.But the love that I have for
 those wonderful furry critters always keeps me going.And just having all of 
you here to let me whine,cry or whatever it may be.Thank you all so much.Sorry 
this is soo long.Please keep praying for my girl.
  Take care,
  Sherry

 
-
Check out the all-new Yahoo! Mail beta - Fire up a more powerful email and get 
things done faster.

Re: OT Big problem, help

2006-11-26 Thread etrent
 thank you for this. this group i mentioned is the only rescue operation i've 
been acquainted with - so from my view i did not know if these were 
idiosyncrasies of this group or a common practice. i don't mean to run verbally 
run them down - i've just being going through some disillusionment with their 
practices. i truly believe their hearts are in the right place - i just think 
they need a good common sense model of best practices.
 
  elizabeth  *Save the earth. It's the only planet with chocolate.*   
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Sun, 26 Nov 2006 9:08 AM
 Subject: Re: OT Big problem, help
 
  
 
 On 11/24/06, ETrent [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I know it isn't a perfect 
world...and I totally support the ideal of rescuing kitties and making their 
lives better...I just wish that there was some kind of guideline that ensured 
the welfare of the rescued kitties. My whole experience has left me very 
resentful of cat rescues...and I am hoping to get some feedback from those of 
you who are involved in this sort of thing. I realize that I am myopic and 
perhaps you can help me see more clearly.This certainly sounds bad. 
There is a rescue around here that I think of as...well, questionable. They 
take dogs out of the pound every day and take them around and display them in 
front of local PetSmarts (which in and of itself is a pretty good idea, I 
think). The ones who aren't adopted go back to the pound at night:(. 
Unfortunately several of these dogs have been adopted out and come down with 
distemper and parvo. This made the local news and the owner of this group 
stated that people were taking a risk if they adopted and they should be aware 
of that. I wasn't thrilled with that statement either.BUT this group has 
done a lot of good, even if I am not thrilled with their methods. Lots of dogs 
have found forever homes that would otherwise have been killed. Same with the 
group I am now having problems with. They've rehomed 5,000 cats.I'm just 
trying to make it my policy to not verbally run down other rescue groups or 
expend my efforts trying to get them shut down. I'm in this to help cats, not 
get involved in politics. I have to remind myself of that just about daily. My 
model is Best Friends in Kaneb, Utah, and they didn't get to where they are 
today by spending all their time trash talking other rescues (not that I am 
suggesting you are trash talking, this is just something I see on a daily basis 
from people involved in rescue - they'll tell people Oh, don't adopt a cat 
from x rescue..they are a bad rescue).Anyway, if you do not support this 
group's practices, don't give them any money. Don't let them guilt you into 
giving them money either. If you want to keep your money local, I would find 
another rescue group. Check them out before you give them money. Cats should 
not be taken to adoption days when ill - that's bad practice. If they want 
people to give them money, the donors should be allowed to examine the living 
conditions of the cats. I let people come by (with reasonable notice, I don't 
want people knocking on my door 24/7 or dumping off cats) and check out my 
babies' living conditions.I send a complete copy of all medical records 
home with every cat I adopt, always. I get paperwork from my vet and put it in 
the cat's file. I am not sure if he would release the paperwork to an adopter 
or not, but it is my job to do that not his.If you don't mind sending the 
money you have earmarked to save cats out of state, I would recommend checking 
out Best Friends in Kaneb, Utah. http://www.bestfriends.org 
  
 -- 
 Vist the Rescuties store and save a kitty life!
 
 http://astore.amazon.com/rescuties-20   

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tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web, free 
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OT, I found something fun to do online

2006-11-26 Thread Jennifer Phaewryn O'Gwynn
Check it out, I'm making wiki-how guides:

This one was a requested one:
http://www.wikihow.com/Take-Good-Care-of-Two-Female-Cats

Phaewryn

Please save Whitey! http://ucat.us/Whitey.html
VT low cost SpayNeuter, and Emergency Financial Assistance for cat owners:
http://ucat.us/VermontLowCost.html
Special Needs Cat Resources: http://ucat.us/domesticcatlinks.html




Re: Pepper died

2006-11-26 Thread Lance

Candace,

I'm sorry to hear of Pepper's passing, and especially that it  
happened so suddenly. You obviously were doing a lot for him. He was  
fortunate to have you as a guardian. If he lived to be 12 years old,  
then he is also a hope for many of us here. Blessings for Pepper and  
for you.


Lance



I just wanted to let you know that Pepper died a few hours ago. He
started getting better with this current episode but was not so good
earlier today.

 I was not expecting him to go so suddenly. I was not at home at the
time so not sure what happened.

I want to thank everyone for their advice and support.

This group is great for those of us who want to take responsibility  
for
the health care of our pets and give them the best chance possible  
for a

good outcome.



Thank you all

Candace





Re: Pepper died

2006-11-26 Thread etrent
 Candace, I am so very sorry. 
 
 elizabeth 

   
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Sun, 26 Nov 2006 5:18 PM
 Subject: Pepper died
 
   I just wanted to let you know that Pepper died a few hours ago. He started 
getting better with this current episode but was not so good earlier today.  I 
was not expecting him to go so suddenly. I was not at home at the time so not 
sure what happened. I want to thank everyone for their advice and support. This 
group is great for those of us who want to take responsibility for the health 
care of our pets and give them the best chance possible for a good outcome.   
Thank you all Candace

Check out the new AOL.  Most comprehensive set of free safety and security 
tools, free access to millions of high-quality videos from across the web, free 
AOL Mail and more.