[Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Maryam Ulomi


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[Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Maryam Ulomi
Hello,

I'm sorry for that first email.
I wanted to find out if anyone had some
advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue who is 
FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral cat, her 
glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being cared for 
well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two adult cats.
I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein contents and no 
seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any other suggestions, hints, 
are very welcome!

Thank you 

Sent from my iPhone.

On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:34, Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com wrote:

 

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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Beth
L-lysine a good supplement to add, but if her glands are swollen, she needs to 
go to the vet for bloodwork. She may be fighting off an infection  need meds.

There is not reason you cannot keep her with your other cat if she continues to 
test positive. Just make sure you cat is up to date on it's FeLV vaccine. 
(initial vaccine  booster)

Beth


 
Don't Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org
 



 From: Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 12:39 PM
Subject: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten
 
Hello,

I'm sorry for that first email.
I wanted to find out if anyone had some
advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue who is 
FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral cat, her 
glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being cared for 
well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two adult cats.
I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein contents and no 
seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any other suggestions, hints, 
are very welcome!

Thank you 

Sent from my iPhone.

On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:34, Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com wrote:

 

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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Maryam Ulomi
Hello,
Thanks, she is already taking l-lysine twice a day. We have done stool sample, 
bloodwork and urine test and there is no infection, which is why my vet believe 
she will test positive again when retested in 3 months.


Sent from my iPhone.

On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:54, Beth create_me_...@yahoo.com wrote:
 L-lysine a good supplement to add, but if her glands are swollen, she needs 
 to go to the vet for bloodwork. She may be fighting off an infection  need 
 meds.
 
 There is not reason you cannot keep her with your other cat if she continues 
 to test positive. Just make sure you cat is up to date on it's FeLV vaccine. 
 (initial vaccine  booster)
 
 Beth
 
  
 Don't Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org
  
 
 From: Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
 Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 12:39 PM
 Subject: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten
 
 Hello,
 
 I'm sorry for that first email.
 I wanted to find out if anyone had some
 advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue who 
 is FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral cat, 
 her glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being cared 
 for well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two adult 
 cats.
 I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein contents and no 
 seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any other suggestions, 
 hints, are very welcome!
 
 Thank you 
 
 Sent from my iPhone.
 
 On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:34, Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  
 
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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Marcia Baronda
Could there be a hidden infection? Something is causing those lymph nodes to 
swell. I admire you, for taking in this little kitten. 

Take care
Marcia

Sent from my iPad that my most awesome kids surprised me with, Christmas 2010. 

On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:08 AM, Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hello,
 Thanks, she is already taking l-lysine twice a day. We have done stool 
 sample, bloodwork and urine test and there is no infection, which is why my 
 vet believe she will test positive again when retested in 3 months.
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone.
 
 On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:54, Beth create_me_...@yahoo.com wrote:
 L-lysine a good supplement to add, but if her glands are swollen, she needs 
 to go to the vet for bloodwork. She may be fighting off an infection  need 
 meds.
 
 There is not reason you cannot keep her with your other cat if she continues 
 to test positive. Just make sure you cat is up to date on it's FeLV vaccine. 
 (initial vaccine  booster)
 
 Beth
 
  
 Don't Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org
  
 
 From: Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
 Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 12:39 PM
 Subject: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten
 
 Hello,
 
 I'm sorry for that first email.
 I wanted to find out if anyone had some
 advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue who 
 is FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral cat, 
 her glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being cared 
 for well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two adult 
 cats.
 I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein contents and no 
 seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any other suggestions, 
 hints, are very welcome!
 
 Thank you 
 
 Sent from my iPhone.
 
 On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:34, Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  
 
 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
 
 
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 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Lee Evans
Could you trap the mother cat and have her tested, spayed, given rabies 
vaccination and put back in the colony if it's a colony or if a single cat, 
allow her to live where you found her and feed her?   If mom cat tests 
positive, kitten is probably fighting off the virus.  If mom cat tests 
negative, kitten probably has some other type of infection.


 
Spay and Neuter your cats and dogs and your weird relatives and nasty neighbors 
too!





 From: Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 7:39 AM
Subject: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten
 
Hello,

I'm sorry for that first email.
I wanted to find out if anyone had some
advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue who is 
FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral cat, her 
glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being cared for 
well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two adult cats.
I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein contents and no 
seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any other suggestions, hints, 
are very welcome!

Thank you 

Sent from my iPhone.

On Sep 17, 2012, at 8:34, Maryam Ulomi ava...@gmail.com wrote:

 

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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Lorrie
I feel for you.. I rescued a litter of 4 kittens who all tested FelV
positive.  They are now about 4 1/2 months old and still very active and
playful with no sign of sickness. I plan to have them restested next month,
and I'm hoping they will all be negative by then.  They have three isolation
rooms to play in at my cat sanctuary, and I feed them well and keep them
stress free. This does help. 

Lorrie

On 09-17, Maryam Ulomi wrote:
 Hello,
 
 I'm sorry for that first email. I wanted to find out if anyone had some
 advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue
 who is FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral
 cat, her glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being
 cared for well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two
 adult cats. I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein
 contents and no seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any
 other suggestions, hints, are very welcome!
 
 Thank you 
 

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Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

2012-09-17 Thread Jamielynn Storch
Just an update.  The rescue was unable to offer any assistance with the
transport in the time frame needed so they are holding off on getting 2 of
the cats there.  Instead I will be transporting an FIV+ stressed out kitty
on my trek.  Wish me luck that his sedatives work!

Thanks so much for the offer to help.
-- 
Jamielynn  Storch
www.jlynnphotographyonline.com
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Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

2012-09-17 Thread Natalie
If I may offer some advice, don't sedate!  My vet hates it because you never
know how any cat may react.cats get more frightened by sedation, what's
happening to them, than a trip.  As long as their cage/carrier is covered,
to make them feel safe, there's not much of  problem.  I have been
transporting cats by car and even on the plane in the cabin often, and never
used sedation.  Some cats were not exactly tame.

Natalie

From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Jamielynn Storch
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 5:07 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

 

Just an update.  The rescue was unable to offer any assistance with the
transport in the time frame needed so they are holding off on getting 2 of
the cats there.  Instead I will be transporting an FIV+ stressed out kitty
on my trek.  Wish me luck that his sedatives work!  


 

Thanks so much for the offer to help.

-- 
Jamielynn  Storch
www.jlynnphotographyonline.com

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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread McKenna's
For everyone that gave me advice a couple weeks ago in regards to the 
FeLuk/FIV re-testing of our 2 1/2 year old greybie baby, Tickles. He still 
tested positive for the FeLuk virus and now also is FIV positive. We 
apparently had him tested before the 8-12 week FIV onset. We are 
disappointed, but still love him and he will be with us for the rest of his 
life. We have chosen to keep him separate from the other three. I know there 
are those of you who mix your negatives with your positives who are 
vaccinated, but we do not want to do that. We feel that with any vaccine, 
nothing is 100% guaranteed. We want to be completely safe. We have a 6 year 
old dominant, ok, bitchy at times, female. I can already see them scrapping. 
Thank you to everyone for your input and great advice.  :)


Melissa L. McKenna

-Original Message- 
From: Lorrie

Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 3:30 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

I feel for you.. I rescued a litter of 4 kittens who all tested FelV
positive.  They are now about 4 1/2 months old and still very active and
playful with no sign of sickness. I plan to have them restested next month,
and I'm hoping they will all be negative by then.  They have three isolation
rooms to play in at my cat sanctuary, and I feed them well and keep them
stress free. This does help.

Lorrie

On 09-17, Maryam Ulomi wrote:

Hello,

I'm sorry for that first email. I wanted to find out if anyone had some
advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue
who is FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral
cat, her glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being
cared for well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two
adult cats. I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein
contents and no seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any
other suggestions, hints, are very welcome!

Thank you



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Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Lee Evans
If you think he might be lonely by himself, consider getting him a spayed 
female FeLv+ cat around his age to keep him company.  Cats are very sociable 
animals.


 
Spay and Neuter your cats and dogs and your weird relatives and nasty neighbors 
too!





 From: McKenna's mckennas...@power-net.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 5:13 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten
 
For everyone that gave me advice a couple weeks ago in regards to the FeLuk/FIV 
re-testing of our 2 1/2 year old greybie baby, Tickles. He still tested 
positive for the FeLuk virus and now also is FIV positive. We apparently had 
him tested before the 8-12 week FIV onset. We are disappointed, but still love 
him and he will be with us for the rest of his life. We have chosen to keep him 
separate from the other three. I know there are those of you who mix your 
negatives with your positives who are vaccinated, but we do not want to do 
that. We feel that with any vaccine, nothing is 100% guaranteed. We want to be 
completely safe. We have a 6 year old dominant, ok, bitchy at times, female. I 
can already see them scrapping. Thank you to everyone for your input and great 
advice.  :)

Melissa L. McKenna

-Original Message- From: Lorrie
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 3:30 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

I feel for you.. I rescued a litter of 4 kittens who all tested FelV
positive.  They are now about 4 1/2 months old and still very active and
playful with no sign of sickness. I plan to have them restested next month,
and I'm hoping they will all be negative by then.  They have three isolation
rooms to play in at my cat sanctuary, and I feed them well and keep them
stress free. This does help.

Lorrie

On 09-17, Maryam Ulomi wrote:
 Hello,
 
 I'm sorry for that first email. I wanted to find out if anyone had some
 advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue
 who is FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral
 cat, her glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being
 cared for well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two
 adult cats. I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein
 contents and no seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any
 other suggestions, hints, are very welcome!
 
 Thank you
 

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Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2012.0.2221 / Virus Database: 2437/5273 - Release Date: 09/17/12 

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Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

2012-09-17 Thread Lee Evans
I find that a product called At Ease or Feloway work very well when sprayed 
into the carrier about a half hour before you put the cat in.  Allow it the 
time to dry, never spray while cat is inside. It really calms them down.  I do 
this when transporting to the vet.  Makes a big difference between having a 
panicked cat in a carrier traveling for a few miles and having a lay back cat 
having a nap on the way.  The worst it can do is nothing.  It's not harmful and 
the cats all react much the same, either calm or not as stressed out as they 
would be.


 
Spay and Neuter your cats and dogs and your weird relatives and nasty neighbors 
too!





 From: Natalie at...@optonline.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 5:05 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends
 

If I may offer some advice, don’t sedate!  My vet hates it because you never 
know how any cat may react…cats get more frightened by sedation, what’s 
happening to them, than a trip.  As long as their cage/carrier is covered, to 
make them feel safe, there’s not much of  problem.  I have been transporting 
cats by car and even on the plane in the cabin often, and never used sedation.  
Some cats were not exactly “tame”.
Natalie
From:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org 
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Jamielynn Storch
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 5:07 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends
 
Just an update.  The rescue was unable to offer any assistance with the 
transport in the time frame needed so they are holding off on getting 2 of the 
cats there.  Instead I will be transporting an FIV+ stressed out kitty on my 
trek.  Wish me luck that his sedatives work!  

 
Thanks so much for the offer to help.
-- 
Jamielynn  Storch
www.jlynnphotographyonline.com
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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread Beth
Thank you for keeping him. I looked at your pic of him on FB. Adorable!

Beth

McKenna's mckennas...@power-net.net wrote:

For everyone that gave me advice a couple weeks ago in regards to the 
FeLuk/FIV re-testing of our 2 1/2 year old greybie baby, Tickles. He still 
tested positive for the FeLuk virus and now also is FIV positive. We 
apparently had him tested before the 8-12 week FIV onset. We are 
disappointed, but still love him and he will be with us for the rest of his 
life. We have chosen to keep him separate from the other three. I know there 
are those of you who mix your negatives with your positives who are 
vaccinated, but we do not want to do that. We feel that with any vaccine, 
nothing is 100% guaranteed. We want to be completely safe. We have a 6 year 
old dominant, ok, bitchy at times, female. I can already see them scrapping. 
Thank you to everyone for your input and great advice.  :)

Melissa L. McKenna

-Original Message- 
From: Lorrie
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 3:30 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

I feel for you.. I rescued a litter of 4 kittens who all tested FelV
positive.  They are now about 4 1/2 months old and still very active and
playful with no sign of sickness. I plan to have them restested next month,
and I'm hoping they will all be negative by then.  They have three isolation
rooms to play in at my cat sanctuary, and I feed them well and keep them
stress free. This does help.

Lorrie

On 09-17, Maryam Ulomi wrote:
 Hello,

 I'm sorry for that first email. I wanted to find out if anyone had some
 advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue
 who is FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral
 cat, her glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being
 cared for well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two
 adult cats. I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein
 contents and no seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any
 other suggestions, hints, are very welcome!

 Thank you


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Version: 2012.0.2221 / Virus Database: 2437/5273 - Release Date: 09/17/12 


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Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

2012-09-17 Thread Natalie
Yes, Feliway is really good.  I thought that they would be medicated with 
something not being good.

I also make sure to spray at least an hour before the cats go into their 
carrier – if it’s too fresh, they hate it!

Have a safe trip!

Natalie

 

From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org 
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Lee Evans
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 7:24 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

 

I find that a product called At Ease or Feloway work very well when sprayed 
into the carrier about a half hour before you put the cat in.  Allow it the 
time to dry, never spray while cat is inside. It really calms them down.  I do 
this when transporting to the vet.  Makes a big difference between having a 
panicked cat in a carrier traveling for a few miles and having a lay back cat 
having a nap on the way.  The worst it can do is nothing.  It's not harmful and 
the cats all react much the same, either calm or not as stressed out as they 
would be.

 

 

Spay and Neuter your cats and dogs and your weird relatives and nasty neighbors 
too!

 

  _  

From: Natalie at...@optonline.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 5:05 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

 

If I may offer some advice, don’t sedate!  My vet hates it because you never 
know how any cat may react…cats get more frightened by sedation, what’s 
happening to them, than a trip.  As long as their cage/carrier is covered, to 
make them feel safe, there’s not much of  problem.  I have been transporting 
cats by car and even on the plane in the cabin often, and never used sedation.  
Some cats were not exactly “tame”.

Natalie

From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org 
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Jamielynn Storch
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 5:07 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FELV Transport to Best Friends

 

Just an update.  The rescue was unable to offer any assistance with the 
transport in the time frame needed so they are holding off on getting 2 of the 
cats there.  Instead I will be transporting an FIV+ stressed out kitty on my 
trek.  Wish me luck that his sedatives work!  


 

Thanks so much for the offer to help.

-- 
Jamielynn  Storch
www.jlynnphotographyonline.com http://www.jlynnphotographyonline.com/ 


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Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

2012-09-17 Thread D.S.Louis
I have a female FIV positive and she is 3 years oldLOVE her more each 
daygot her from pound when she was 3-4 monthsBest cat I ever 
had.Really a big lover
 
Dorothy

A failure is just a stopover on the way to SUCCESS.
 


 From: McKenna's mckennas...@power-net.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 3:13 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten
  
For everyone that gave me advice a couple weeks ago in regards to the FeLuk/FIV 
re-testing of our 2 1/2 year old greybie baby, Tickles. He still tested 
positive for the FeLuk virus and now also is FIV positive. We apparently had 
him tested before the 8-12 week FIV onset. We are disappointed, but still love 
him and he will be with us for the rest of his life. We have chosen to keep him 
separate from the other three. I know there are those of you who mix your 
negatives with your positives who are vaccinated, but we do not want to do 
that. We feel that with any vaccine, nothing is 100% guaranteed. We want to be 
completely safe. We have a 6 year old dominant, ok, bitchy at times, female. I 
can already see them scrapping. Thank you to everyone for your input and great 
advice.  :)

Melissa L. McKenna

-Original Message- From: Lorrie
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2012 3:30 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Nutrition and new FeLV positive kitten

I feel for you.. I rescued a litter of 4 kittens who all tested FelV
positive.  They are now about 4 1/2 months old and still very active and
playful with no sign of sickness. I plan to have them restested next month,
and I'm hoping they will all be negative by then.  They have three isolation
rooms to play in at my cat sanctuary, and I feed them well and keep them
stress free. This does help.

Lorrie

On 09-17, Maryam Ulomi wrote:
 Hello,
 
 I'm sorry for that first email. I wanted to find out if anyone had some
 advice and suggestions on nutrition for the little kitten I have rescue
 who is FeLV positive. She has tested positive and is the kitten of a feral
 cat, her glands are big but I'm hoping because she is now indoor and being
 cared for well she will test negative so I can keep her with my other two
 adult cats. I have been feeding her canned good with very high protein
 contents and no seafood, I read that was the recommended diet but any
 other suggestions, hints, are very welcome!
 
 Thank you
 

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