Re: [Felvtalk] Felvtalk Digest, Vol 47, Issue 6

2018-06-08 Thread Deborah Whorley
orms.
He was treated for fleas and tapeworms and received his first series of
vaccines.  His weight was 2.1 lbs.  They tested him for FIV and FeLV.
About 10 minutes after I got home, they called me and told me he tested
positive for FeLV, a faint positive.  I have been doing a lot of research
and I have been told that a faint positive could just mean that the disease
is starting and he will have a normal positive next time he is tested, and
also that a faint positive is the same as a regular positive. He is not
sick now.  He eats a lot.  I have been feeding him Orijen dry food and both
Weruva and Wellness Core canned food.  He seems to be gaining weight.  He
looks good and he is a very active and vocal kitten.  He is very
affectionate and loves my Cavalier Spaniel, wh
 o he likes to snuggle with after he wears himself at night.
>
> Because he was so young when he was diagnosed, everything I have read
online indicates that he will probably only live for a few months to a year
before he starts to get sick.  I have never had a cat with this disease.
 Everything I find online indicates that most kittens will not be able to
clear the virus and will live 2-3 years if we are lucky.
>
> I am wondering if there are some supplements I can get him started on
now, before he starts to get sick.  Regardless of how long I have him, he
will be loved and cared for.  He is already very spoiled.   I just can't
even picture this little guy being sick.  He is such a good little cat.  I
call him Q.
>
> I just lost my 17 year old Himalayan Persian to cancer a few months ago.
I haven't had a kitten for 17 years.  I have 3 dogs and thought that an
adult cat may be too stressed around my big dogs.  The Cavalier is fine,
but I also have 2 Akitas.  My other cat was fine with the Akitas.  She was
not afraid of them at all.  Q does not seem to be afraid of them, either,
and he lets them give him kisses.  I do separate Q from the Akitas when I
am not around because one of the is very playful and I am afraid that she
would try to play with Q.  The Akitas are over 100 lbs so he could get hurt
so easily.  Q seems to be a very laid back kitten, he does not scare easily
and purrs whenever he is around us.
>
> What can I expect?  Will he start getting sick in a few months?  Do they
just quit eating or what happens?   I would like to think that Q will be
one of the lucky ones that lives for over 10 years, but I know I need to be
realistic.  I just want him to have the best quality of life that he can
have with us.
>
>
>
> JoAnne
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Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Marlene Snowman
Thank you, I appreciate this. 

Marlene 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 8, 2018, at 3:48 PM, Amani Oakley  wrote:
> 
> In my world, my perspective is usually, it can’t hurt. I would at least get 
> her on the Doxycycline. It might help with the other problems you are having, 
> or not, but I would probably give it a try if it were me. The only thing to 
> watch with the Doxycycline is that the hard tablets have been known to get 
> stuck in a cat’s throat and cause burning of the eosophagus. I have never had 
> that problem but I have heard others speak of it. If that is a concern and 
> all you can get are hard tablets, rub them in butter before giving them and 
> ensure that the cat is given some yummy canned food afterwards to ensure that 
> the pill goes down properly. Others have mentioned you can get Doxycycline in 
> liquid form as well. I suspect that the problem has been blown out of 
> proportion to the amount of time it actually occurs, and just like what 
> happened with Winstrol and the link between it and liver damage, it has 
> improperly curtailed the use of Doxycycline. I have found Doxycycline (a 
> tetracycline) to have a truly remarkable range of effectiveness, so with any 
> luck, it may address whatever is causing the other nose and eye infections.
>  
> Amani
>  
> From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of 
> Marlene Snowman
> Sent: June-08-18 2:39 PM
> To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
> Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin
>  
> Thank you Amani for all of this. My little girl, Bear has never gotten rid of 
> a nose infection. And about 1.5 months ago developed an eye and more extreme 
> nose infection. The vet prescribed an antibiotic for 7 days and then every 
> week thereafter 2 to 3 days of this same oral antibiotic. 
>  
> The nose infection, clears for a few days and then starts back. She has no 
> issue with appetite or anything else. Unfortunately the vet has never been 
> able to really examine her as she is so angry and wild with other people. 
>  
> That being said, I’m not sure if things are just the way she has always been, 
> with this chronic nose infection that she has never cleared or something else 
> further developing. Either way, thus antibiotic isn’t working on eliminating 
> this issue. And to your point and your experience with Zander, maybe now is 
> the time for me to get this protocol going before something further or a 
> worsening. 
>  
> Thoughts ?
> M
>  
>  
>  
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> On Jun 8, 2018, at 3:04 PM, Amani Oakley  wrote:
> 
> Hi Marlene
>  
> I am not sure about a 3 year old. I think if he/she is stable and having no 
> problems, I wouldn’t be too concerned.
>  
> I would be more worried about a kitten, since they have very little reserves. 
> Moreover, generally speaking, FeLV is known to be more problematic for 
> kittens, then it is for older cats. As I have mentioned in other posts, when 
> my cat Zander was diagnosed with FeLV (and he too was a very sickly little 
> kitten when we first got him – worms, leaking nose, runny diarrhea and almost 
> blind with gunk in both eyes), he lived in our house with at least 8 other 
> cats for more than 7 years and no one else got it.
>  
> With Zander, we had an initial episode in June where he got very sick, and 
> his blood counts were terrible, and then he seemed to recover. Getting no 
> advice otherwise from the vets, other than the fact that he was FeLV 
> positive, we were relieved and happy that he seemed to be okay. He wasn’t 
> treated with anything after the first bout of illness. Then it came back with 
> a vengeance in September (with haematocrit at FIVE compared to a normal of 25 
> to 45), and from September and from September to December, we fought to keep 
> him alive, with blood transfusions and trying every option out there – LTCI, 
> interferon, etc. He was also receiving Doxycycline and prednisone at that 
> time. It wasn’t until I added the Winstrol at the end of December, did we get 
> a startling and amazing turn-around, with his red cells and haematocrit 
> finally beginning to climb slowly but steadily out of the terribly low 
> numbers we had been trying to fight with the blood transfusions.
>  
> I always said that if I had to do it again, I would have started treating 
> Zander after that first episode in June, and before he became critically ill, 
> and almost died in September. My research has shown that Doxycycline has the 
> ability to inhibit viral replication and/or the building of the viral coat. I 
> would therefore feel that there is something which may be gained in treating 
> with Doxycycline for a course of treatment, in the hopes that if the virus is 
> there, it is stymied in its ability to reproduce. The problem is that there 
> is really no way to know if the Doxycycline did anything, if the cat doesn’t 
> go on to have a frank FeLV infection. It could obviously also be that the cat 
> would never have gone on to have a f

Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Amani Oakley
In my world, my perspective is usually, it can’t hurt. I would at least get her 
on the Doxycycline. It might help with the other problems you are having, or 
not, but I would probably give it a try if it were me. The only thing to watch 
with the Doxycycline is that the hard tablets have been known to get stuck in a 
cat’s throat and cause burning of the eosophagus. I have never had that problem 
but I have heard others speak of it. If that is a concern and all you can get 
are hard tablets, rub them in butter before giving them and ensure that the cat 
is given some yummy canned food afterwards to ensure that the pill goes down 
properly. Others have mentioned you can get Doxycycline in liquid form as well. 
I suspect that the problem has been blown out of proportion to the amount of 
time it actually occurs, and just like what happened with Winstrol and the link 
between it and liver damage, it has improperly curtailed the use of 
Doxycycline. I have found Doxycycline (a tetracycline) to have a truly 
remarkable range of effectiveness, so with any luck, it may address whatever is 
causing the other nose and eye infections.

Amani

From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of 
Marlene Snowman
Sent: June-08-18 2:39 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

Thank you Amani for all of this. My little girl, Bear has never gotten rid of a 
nose infection. And about 1.5 months ago developed an eye and more extreme nose 
infection. The vet prescribed an antibiotic for 7 days and then every week 
thereafter 2 to 3 days of this same oral antibiotic.

The nose infection, clears for a few days and then starts back. She has no 
issue with appetite or anything else. Unfortunately the vet has never been able 
to really examine her as she is so angry and wild with other people.

That being said, I’m not sure if things are just the way she has always been, 
with this chronic nose infection that she has never cleared or something else 
further developing. Either way, thus antibiotic isn’t working on eliminating 
this issue. And to your point and your experience with Zander, maybe now is the 
time for me to get this protocol going before something further or a worsening.

Thoughts ?
M



Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 8, 2018, at 3:04 PM, Amani Oakley 
mailto:aoak...@oakleylegal.com>> wrote:
Hi Marlene

I am not sure about a 3 year old. I think if he/she is stable and having no 
problems, I wouldn’t be too concerned.

I would be more worried about a kitten, since they have very little reserves. 
Moreover, generally speaking, FeLV is known to be more problematic for kittens, 
then it is for older cats. As I have mentioned in other posts, when my cat 
Zander was diagnosed with FeLV (and he too was a very sickly little kitten when 
we first got him – worms, leaking nose, runny diarrhea and almost blind with 
gunk in both eyes), he lived in our house with at least 8 other cats for more 
than 7 years and no one else got it.

With Zander, we had an initial episode in June where he got very sick, and his 
blood counts were terrible, and then he seemed to recover. Getting no advice 
otherwise from the vets, other than the fact that he was FeLV positive, we were 
relieved and happy that he seemed to be okay. He wasn’t treated with anything 
after the first bout of illness. Then it came back with a vengeance in 
September (with haematocrit at FIVE compared to a normal of 25 to 45), and from 
September and from September to December, we fought to keep him alive, with 
blood transfusions and trying every option out there – LTCI, interferon, etc. 
He was also receiving Doxycycline and prednisone at that time. It wasn’t until 
I added the Winstrol at the end of December, did we get a startling and amazing 
turn-around, with his red cells and haematocrit finally beginning to climb 
slowly but steadily out of the terribly low numbers we had been trying to fight 
with the blood transfusions.

I always said that if I had to do it again, I would have started treating 
Zander after that first episode in June, and before he became critically ill, 
and almost died in September. My research has shown that Doxycycline has the 
ability to inhibit viral replication and/or the building of the viral coat. I 
would therefore feel that there is something which may be gained in treating 
with Doxycycline for a course of treatment, in the hopes that if the virus is 
there, it is stymied in its ability to reproduce. The problem is that there is 
really no way to know if the Doxycycline did anything, if the cat doesn’t go on 
to have a frank FeLV infection. It could obviously also be that the cat would 
never have gone on to have a frank FeLV infection. However, in my mind anyway, 
I think it would be a reasonable approach to treat with Doxycycline in the 
absence of symptoms, after a FeLV diagnosis. I recommend an extended treatment 
course of 6 weeks, because this is not a bacterial infection, and what 

Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Marlene Snowman
Thank you Amani for all of this. My little girl, Bear has never gotten rid of a 
nose infection. And about 1.5 months ago developed an eye and more extreme nose 
infection. The vet prescribed an antibiotic for 7 days and then every week 
thereafter 2 to 3 days of this same oral antibiotic. 

The nose infection, clears for a few days and then starts back. She has no 
issue with appetite or anything else. Unfortunately the vet has never been able 
to really examine her as she is so angry and wild with other people. 

That being said, I’m not sure if things are just the way she has always been, 
with this chronic nose infection that she has never cleared or something else 
further developing. Either way, thus antibiotic isn’t working on eliminating 
this issue. And to your point and your experience with Zander, maybe now is the 
time for me to get this protocol going before something further or a worsening. 

Thoughts ?
M




Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 8, 2018, at 3:04 PM, Amani Oakley  wrote:
> 
> Hi Marlene
>  
> I am not sure about a 3 year old. I think if he/she is stable and having no 
> problems, I wouldn’t be too concerned.
>  
> I would be more worried about a kitten, since they have very little reserves. 
> Moreover, generally speaking, FeLV is known to be more problematic for 
> kittens, then it is for older cats. As I have mentioned in other posts, when 
> my cat Zander was diagnosed with FeLV (and he too was a very sickly little 
> kitten when we first got him – worms, leaking nose, runny diarrhea and almost 
> blind with gunk in both eyes), he lived in our house with at least 8 other 
> cats for more than 7 years and no one else got it.
>  
> With Zander, we had an initial episode in June where he got very sick, and 
> his blood counts were terrible, and then he seemed to recover. Getting no 
> advice otherwise from the vets, other than the fact that he was FeLV 
> positive, we were relieved and happy that he seemed to be okay. He wasn’t 
> treated with anything after the first bout of illness. Then it came back with 
> a vengeance in September (with haematocrit at FIVE compared to a normal of 25 
> to 45), and from September and from September to December, we fought to keep 
> him alive, with blood transfusions and trying every option out there – LTCI, 
> interferon, etc. He was also receiving Doxycycline and prednisone at that 
> time. It wasn’t until I added the Winstrol at the end of December, did we get 
> a startling and amazing turn-around, with his red cells and haematocrit 
> finally beginning to climb slowly but steadily out of the terribly low 
> numbers we had been trying to fight with the blood transfusions.
>  
> I always said that if I had to do it again, I would have started treating 
> Zander after that first episode in June, and before he became critically ill, 
> and almost died in September. My research has shown that Doxycycline has the 
> ability to inhibit viral replication and/or the building of the viral coat. I 
> would therefore feel that there is something which may be gained in treating 
> with Doxycycline for a course of treatment, in the hopes that if the virus is 
> there, it is stymied in its ability to reproduce. The problem is that there 
> is really no way to know if the Doxycycline did anything, if the cat doesn’t 
> go on to have a frank FeLV infection. It could obviously also be that the cat 
> would never have gone on to have a frank FeLV infection. However, in my mind 
> anyway, I think it would be a reasonable approach to treat with Doxycycline 
> in the absence of symptoms, after a FeLV diagnosis. I recommend an extended 
> treatment course of 6 weeks, because this is not a bacterial infection, and 
> what is being hoped for here is to stymie the reproduction and spreading of a 
> virus.
>  
> I also mentioned recently on this chatline, that I found that the Doxycycline 
> is also one of the few antibiotics which is effective against the immature 
> phase of round worms. I had no idea that there was anything to done for round 
> worms except the deworming that is regularly done. I had done that with a 
> group of cats (young siblings) I had rescued from the road, and then A YEAR 
> later, one of the three vomited up a round worm. I couldn’t figure out what 
> had happened. One of the other siblings had gotten pregnant (yes – I am 
> totally embarrassed – long story but not acceptable) and HER KITTENS had a 
> whole lot of very strange symptoms. I finally figured out that the life cycle 
> of round worms has the immature stage going through bodily tissues including 
> the eyes, and these kittens had all kinds of eye problems which ONLY 
> responded to oral doxycycline – ie – nothing topical and no other 
> antibiotics. Anyway, I’ll save you all my pondering and research on this, and 
> my ultimate conclusion that deworming should probably be accompanied by oral 
> doxycycline, since the immature roundworm forms are not affected by the 
> medication use

Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Amani Oakley
Hi Marlene

I am not sure about a 3 year old. I think if he/she is stable and having no 
problems, I wouldn’t be too concerned.

I would be more worried about a kitten, since they have very little reserves. 
Moreover, generally speaking, FeLV is known to be more problematic for kittens, 
then it is for older cats. As I have mentioned in other posts, when my cat 
Zander was diagnosed with FeLV (and he too was a very sickly little kitten when 
we first got him – worms, leaking nose, runny diarrhea and almost blind with 
gunk in both eyes), he lived in our house with at least 8 other cats for more 
than 7 years and no one else got it.

With Zander, we had an initial episode in June where he got very sick, and his 
blood counts were terrible, and then he seemed to recover. Getting no advice 
otherwise from the vets, other than the fact that he was FeLV positive, we were 
relieved and happy that he seemed to be okay. He wasn’t treated with anything 
after the first bout of illness. Then it came back with a vengeance in 
September (with haematocrit at FIVE compared to a normal of 25 to 45), and from 
September and from September to December, we fought to keep him alive, with 
blood transfusions and trying every option out there – LTCI, interferon, etc. 
He was also receiving Doxycycline and prednisone at that time. It wasn’t until 
I added the Winstrol at the end of December, did we get a startling and amazing 
turn-around, with his red cells and haematocrit finally beginning to climb 
slowly but steadily out of the terribly low numbers we had been trying to fight 
with the blood transfusions.

I always said that if I had to do it again, I would have started treating 
Zander after that first episode in June, and before he became critically ill, 
and almost died in September. My research has shown that Doxycycline has the 
ability to inhibit viral replication and/or the building of the viral coat. I 
would therefore feel that there is something which may be gained in treating 
with Doxycycline for a course of treatment, in the hopes that if the virus is 
there, it is stymied in its ability to reproduce. The problem is that there is 
really no way to know if the Doxycycline did anything, if the cat doesn’t go on 
to have a frank FeLV infection. It could obviously also be that the cat would 
never have gone on to have a frank FeLV infection. However, in my mind anyway, 
I think it would be a reasonable approach to treat with Doxycycline in the 
absence of symptoms, after a FeLV diagnosis. I recommend an extended treatment 
course of 6 weeks, because this is not a bacterial infection, and what is being 
hoped for here is to stymie the reproduction and spreading of a virus.

I also mentioned recently on this chatline, that I found that the Doxycycline 
is also one of the few antibiotics which is effective against the immature 
phase of round worms. I had no idea that there was anything to done for round 
worms except the deworming that is regularly done. I had done that with a group 
of cats (young siblings) I had rescued from the road, and then A YEAR later, 
one of the three vomited up a round worm. I couldn’t figure out what had 
happened. One of the other siblings had gotten pregnant (yes – I am totally 
embarrassed – long story but not acceptable) and HER KITTENS had a whole lot of 
very strange symptoms. I finally figured out that the life cycle of round worms 
has the immature stage going through bodily tissues including the eyes, and 
these kittens had all kinds of eye problems which ONLY responded to oral 
doxycycline – ie – nothing topical and no other antibiotics. Anyway, I’ll save 
you all my pondering and research on this, and my ultimate conclusion that 
deworming should probably be accompanied by oral doxycycline, since the 
immature roundworm forms are not affected by the medication used to deworm the 
cats, and then cycle through and become adults (after invading the lungs and 
heavy coughing allows the immatures to be swallowed and end up in the 
intestines where they mature). Thus, a course of Doxycycline may also deal with 
this other issue at the same time.

Whew.

Amani

From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of 
Marlene Snowman
Sent: June-08-18 12:41 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

Amani, in reading this I now realize that I may not be doing enough for my 3 
year old. I had understood that this protocol was for when signs/symptoms 
showed. I didn’t realize otherwise. From reading your post to JoAnne I should 
also be getting my vet to prescribe now the doxy ? My cat is 6.2 lbs. should I 
be combining that with some other parts of this protocol now and only going to 
the winstrol at a later date?

Any advice is appreciated

Marlene
Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 8, 2018, at 1:21 PM, Amani Oakley 
mailto:aoak...@oakleylegal.com>> wrote:
Hi JoAnne

If this was my kitten, I would not want to just wait it out to see what might 
tran

Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Marlene Snowman
Amani, in reading this I now realize that I may not be doing enough for my 3 
year old. I had understood that this protocol was for when signs/symptoms 
showed. I didn’t realize otherwise. From reading your post to JoAnne I should 
also be getting my vet to prescribe now the doxy ? My cat is 6.2 lbs. should I 
be combining that with some other parts of this protocol now and only going to 
the winstrol at a later date?

Any advice is appreciated

Marlene 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 8, 2018, at 1:21 PM, Amani Oakley  wrote:
> 
> Hi JoAnne
>  
> If this was my kitten, I would not want to just wait it out to see what might 
> transpire. I did that with my kitten, and it was a mistake.
>  
> My suggestion is that you start him on a long course (6 weeks) of 
> Doxycycline. I don’t know the dosing for such a small kitten. My guess would 
> be 25 mg daily. I don’t think you need to start right away – give him some 
> time to eat, bulk, recover from the other things like worms, etc.
>  
> You might also want to start now finding out if your vet will agree to 
> prescribe Winstrol if worst comes to worst. Not all vets have heard of 
> Winstrol (Stanazalol) or are willing to obtain it. The combination I 
> recommend, and had a very good response from, is:
>  
> Winstrol – 1 mg twice a day
>  
> Doxycycline – 1/5 to ¼ tablet (100 mg) twice a day
>  
> Prednisolone – ½ 5 mg tablet, twice a day
>  
>  
> Amani
>  
> From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of 
> JoAnne Kraun
> Sent: June-07-18 8:22 PM
> To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
> Subject: [Felvtalk] Quentin
>  
> I recently adopted a kitten from a rehoming site online.  He was born on 
> March 20, he was a little over 8 weeks when I got him.  He was covered in 
> fleas so I took him straight to the vet.  They said he also had tapeworms.  
> He was treated for fleas and tapeworms and received his first series of 
> vaccines.  His weight was 2.1 lbs.  They tested him for FIV and FeLV.  About 
> 10 minutes after I got home, they called me and told me he tested positive 
> for FeLV, a faint positive.  I have been doing a lot of research and I have 
> been told that a faint positive could just mean that the disease is starting 
> and he will have a normal positive next time he is tested, and also that a 
> faint positive is the same as a regular positive. He is not sick now.  He 
> eats a lot.  I have been feeding him Orijen dry food and both Weruva and 
> Wellness Core canned food.  He seems to be gaining weight.  He looks good and 
> he is a very active and vocal kitten.  He is very affectionate and loves my 
> Cavalier Spaniel, who he likes to snuggle with after he wears himself at 
> night.
>  
> Because he was so young when he was diagnosed, everything I have read online 
> indicates that he will probably only live for a few months to a year before 
> he starts to get sick.  I have never had a cat with this disease.   
> Everything I find online indicates that most kittens will not be able to  
> clear the virus and will live 2-3 years if we are lucky.
>  
> I am wondering if there are some supplements I can get him started on now, 
> before he starts to get sick.  Regardless of how long I have him, he will be 
> loved and cared for.  He is already very spoiled.   I just can't even picture 
> this little guy being sick.  He is such a good little cat.  I call him Q.  
>  
> I just lost my 17 year old Himalayan Persian to cancer a few months ago.  I 
> haven't had a kitten for 17 years.  I have 3 dogs and thought that an adult 
> cat may be too stressed around my big dogs.  The Cavalier is fine, but I also 
> have 2 Akitas.  My other cat was fine with the Akitas.  She was not afraid of 
> them at all.  Q does not seem to be afraid of them, either, and he lets them 
> give him kisses.  I do separate Q from the Akitas when I am not around 
> because one of the is very playful and I am afraid that she would try to play 
> with Q.  The Akitas are over 100 lbs so he could get hurt so easily.  Q seems 
> to be a very laid back kitten, he does not scare easily and purrs whenever he 
> is around us.   
>  
> What can I expect?  Will he start getting sick in a few months?  Do they just 
> quit eating or what happens?   I would like to think that Q will be one of 
> the lucky ones that lives for over 10 years, but I know I need to be 
> realistic.  I just want him to have the best quality of life that he can have 
> with us.
>  
>  
>  
> JoAnne
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Re: [Felvtalk] Felvtalk Digest, Vol 47, Issue 1

2018-06-08 Thread ROBERT CHAPEL

Joanne...  

I'm so sorry that your little man tested positive.  If it's any help.. 
of the last 3 faint positives we have had at the shelter where I 
volunteer... 2 have tested negative at both 3 and 6 months.  My 
experience, limited as it is, is that the earlier there is a definitive 
Dx the shorter the lifespan of the kitty ( without the use of the 
protocols you'll learn about here)...  Don't assume ( in your heart) yet 
that you have an FelV kitten you may very well not ..  We don't assume a 
cat is positive until more definitive testing is done at 6 months or at 
the very least until the immunologic system has had a chance to mature. 
( I'm assuming that your current results were from a SNAP 
test??..    Thank you for caring for this kitten he sounds like he 
has a great personality..



Bob in NY
On Fri, Jun 08, 2018 at 12:08 PM, felvtalk-requ...@felineleukemia.org 
wrote:



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Today's Topics:

   1. Quentin (JoAnne Kraun)
   2. Re: Quentin (Marlene Snowman)
   3. Re: Quentin (Oliver Mccann)


--

Message: 1
Date: Fri, 8 Jun 2018 00:21:41 +
From: JoAnne Kraun To: "felvtalk@felineleukemia.org" Subject: 
[Felvtalk] Quentin

Message-ID:


Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

I recently adopted a kitten from a rehoming site online.  He was born 
on March 20, he was a little over 8 weeks when I got him.  He was 
covered in fleas so I took him straight to the vet.  They said he also 
had tapeworms.  He was treated for fleas and tapeworms and received 
his first series of vaccines.  His weight was 2.1 lbs.  They tested 
him for FIV and FeLV.  About 10 minutes after I got home, they called 
me and told me he tested positive for FeLV, a faint positive.  I have 
been doing a lot of research and I have been told that a faint 
positive could just mean that the disease is starting and he will have 
a normal positive next time he is tested, and also that a faint 
positive is the same as a regular positive. He is not sick now.  He 
eats a lot.  I have been feeding him Orijen dry food and both Weruva 
and Wellness Core canned food.  He seems to be gaining weight.  He 
looks good and he is a very active and vocal kitten.  He is very 
affectionate and loves my Cavalier Spaniel, who  he likes to snuggle 
with after he wears himself at night.



Because he was so young when he was diagnosed, everything I have read 
online indicates that he will probably only live for a few months to a 
year before he starts to get sick.  I have never had a cat with this 
disease.   Everything I find online indicates that most kittens will 
not be able to  clear the virus and will live 2-3 years if we are 
lucky.



I am wondering if there are some supplements I can get him started on 
now, before he starts to get sick.  Regardless of how long I have him, 
he will be loved and cared for.  He is already very spoiled.   I just 
can't even picture this little guy being sick.  He is such a good 
little cat.  I call him Q.



I just lost my 17 year old Himalayan Persian to cancer a few months 
ago.  I haven't had a kitten for 17 years.  I have 3 dogs and thought 
that an adult cat may be too stressed around my big dogs.  The 
Cavalier is fine, but I also have 2 Akitas.  My other cat was fine 
with the Akitas.  She was not afraid of them at all.  Q does not seem 
to be afraid of them, either, and he lets them give him kisses.  I do 
separate Q from the Akitas when I am not around because one of the is 
very playful and I am afraid that she would try to play with Q.  The 
Akitas are over 100 lbs so he could get hurt so easily.  Q seems to be 
a very laid back kitten, he does not scare easily and purrs whenever 
he is around us.



What can I expect?  Will he start getting sick in a few months?  Do 
they just quit eating or what happens?   I would like to think that Q 
will be one of the lucky ones that lives for over 10 years, but I know 
I need to be realistic.  I just want him to have the best quality of 
life that he can have with us.





JoAnne
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Message: 2
Date: Fri, 08 Jun 2018 05:34:31 -0300
From: Marlene Snowman To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin
Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"

Hi JoAnne, I have a FelV who is 3, who came to me at a month old and 
tested positive im

Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Amani Oakley
Hi JoAnne

If this was my kitten, I would not want to just wait it out to see what might 
transpire. I did that with my kitten, and it was a mistake.

My suggestion is that you start him on a long course (6 weeks) of Doxycycline. 
I don't know the dosing for such a small kitten. My guess would be 25 mg daily. 
I don't think you need to start right away - give him some time to eat, bulk, 
recover from the other things like worms, etc.

You might also want to start now finding out if your vet will agree to 
prescribe Winstrol if worst comes to worst. Not all vets have heard of Winstrol 
(Stanazalol) or are willing to obtain it. The combination I recommend, and had 
a very good response from, is:

Winstrol - 1 mg twice a day

Doxycycline - 1/5 to ¼ tablet (100 mg) twice a day

Prednisolone - ½ 5 mg tablet, twice a day


Amani

From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of JoAnne 
Kraun
Sent: June-07-18 8:22 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] Quentin


I recently adopted a kitten from a rehoming site online.  He was born on March 
20, he was a little over 8 weeks when I got him.  He was covered in fleas so I 
took him straight to the vet.  They said he also had tapeworms.  He was treated 
for fleas and tapeworms and received his first series of vaccines.  His weight 
was 2.1 lbs.  They tested him for FIV and FeLV.  About 10 minutes after I got 
home, they called me and told me he tested positive for FeLV, a faint positive. 
 I have been doing a lot of research and I have been told that a faint positive 
could just mean that the disease is starting and he will have a normal positive 
next time he is tested, and also that a faint positive is the same as a regular 
positive. He is not sick now.  He eats a lot.  I have been feeding him Orijen 
dry food and both Weruva and Wellness Core canned food.  He seems to be gaining 
weight.  He looks good and he is a very active and vocal kitten.  He is very 
affectionate and loves my Cavalier Spaniel, who he likes to snuggle with after 
he wears himself at night.



Because he was so young when he was diagnosed, everything I have read online 
indicates that he will probably only live for a few months to a year before he 
starts to get sick.  I have never had a cat with this disease.   Everything I 
find online indicates that most kittens will not be able to  clear the virus 
and will live 2-3 years if we are lucky.



I am wondering if there are some supplements I can get him started on now, 
before he starts to get sick.  Regardless of how long I have him, he will be 
loved and cared for.  He is already very spoiled.   I just can't even picture 
this little guy being sick.  He is such a good little cat.  I call him Q.



I just lost my 17 year old Himalayan Persian to cancer a few months ago.  I 
haven't had a kitten for 17 years.  I have 3 dogs and thought that an adult cat 
may be too stressed around my big dogs.  The Cavalier is fine, but I also have 
2 Akitas.  My other cat was fine with the Akitas.  She was not afraid of them 
at all.  Q does not seem to be afraid of them, either, and he lets them give 
him kisses.  I do separate Q from the Akitas when I am not around because one 
of the is very playful and I am afraid that she would try to play with Q.  The 
Akitas are over 100 lbs so he could get hurt so easily.  Q seems to be a very 
laid back kitten, he does not scare easily and purrs whenever he is around us.



What can I expect?  Will he start getting sick in a few months?  Do they just 
quit eating or what happens?   I would like to think that Q will be one of the 
lucky ones that lives for over 10 years, but I know I need to be realistic.  I 
just want him to have the best quality of life that he can have with us.






JoAnne
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Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Oliver Mccann
 There are a few things you can try but nothing proven to work. People have had 
good results with T-cyte, Acemannan, and Vitamin C and I think most of these 
drugs work better before the cat gets sick. My cat Oliver is 3.5 and has severe 
non regenerative anemia caused by FeLV. We just started him on T-cyte but we 
are not very hopeful at this stage in the game. Hopefully you have better luck 
with Q.
Cheers
On Friday, June 8, 2018, 3:34:56 AM CDT, Marlene Snowman 
 wrote:  
 
 Hi JoAnne, I have a FelV who is 3, who came to me at a month old and tested 
positive immediately. At that time she had infections and fleas as she was 
living outdoors alone. The vet recommended euthanasia, I didn’t agree. All her 
issues were cleared, except the FelV, although I had her tested and was hopeful 
a second time. 
I have had the vet run complete blood work to ensure a known base line. Feed 
her well and this vet has added wei qi with booster for her immune system and 
we have also used Chinese herbs previously too and Enisyl-F. I have a second 
adult cat who I test annually who is also given a vaccine against this. 
I am hopeful that my 3 year old will not develop the illnesses but at this time 
have not been reacting other than boosting her immune system. 
Others on line have much more experience than me and I’m sure will add more 
info. Despite the illness and what may come, these are wonderful fur babies 
whose life may be cut shorter yet quality and love is yours. 
Good luck, and don’t be afraid to give this little kitten the best life 
possible. Who knows what the future will hold
M

Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 7, 2018, at 9:21 PM, JoAnne Kraun  wrote:




I recently adopted a kitten from a rehoming site online.  He was born on March 
20, he was a little over 8 weeks when I got him.  He was covered in fleas so I 
took him straight to the vet.  They said he also had tapeworms.  He was treated 
for fleas and tapeworms and received his first series of vaccines.  His weight 
was 2.1 lbs.  They tested him for FIV and FeLV.  About 10 minutes after I got 
home, they called me and told me he tested positive for FeLV, a faint positive. 
 I have been doing a lot of research and I have been told that a faint positive 
could just mean that the disease is starting and he will have a normal positive 
next time he is tested, and also that a faint positive is the same as a regular 
positive. He is not sick now.  He eats a lot.  I have been feeding him Orijen 
dry food and both Weruva and Wellness Core canned food.  He seems to be gaining 
weight.  He looks good and he is a very active and vocal kitten.  He is very 
affectionate and loves my Cavalier Spaniel, who he likes to snuggle with after 
he wears himself at night.




Because he was so young when he was diagnosed, everything I have read online 
indicates that he will probably only live for a few months to a year before he 
starts to get sick.  I have never had a cat with this disease.   Everything I 
find online indicates that most kittens will not be able to  clear the virus 
and will live 2-3 years if we are lucky.




I am wondering if there are some supplements I can get him started on now, 
before he starts to get sick.  Regardless of how long I have him, he will be 
loved and cared for.  He is already very spoiled.   I just can't even picture 
this little guy being sick.  He is such a good little cat.  I call him Q.  




I just lost my 17 year old Himalayan Persian to cancer a few months ago.  I 
haven't had a kitten for 17 years.  I have 3 dogs and thought that an adult cat 
may be too stressed around my big dogs.  The Cavalier is fine, but I also have 
2 Akitas.  My other cat was fine with the Akitas.  She was not afraid of them 
at all.  Q does not seem to be afraid of them, either, and he lets them give 
him kisses.  I do separate Q from the Akitas when I am not around because one 
of the is very playful and I am afraid that she would try to play with Q.  The 
Akitas are over 100 lbs so he could get hurt so easily.  Q seems to be a very 
laid back kitten, he does not scare easily and purrs whenever he is around us.  
  




What can I expect?  Will he start getting sick in a few months?  Do they just 
quit eating or what happens?   I would like to think that Q will be one of the 
lucky ones that lives for over 10 years, but I know I need to be realistic.  I 
just want him to have the best quality of life that he can have with us.









JoAnne 
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Re: [Felvtalk] Quentin

2018-06-08 Thread Marlene Snowman
Hi JoAnne, I have a FelV who is 3, who came to me at a month old and tested 
positive immediately. At that time she had infections and fleas as she was 
living outdoors alone. The vet recommended euthanasia, I didn’t agree. All her 
issues were cleared, except the FelV, although I had her tested and was hopeful 
a second time. 

I have had the vet run complete blood work to ensure a known base line. Feed 
her well and this vet has added wei qi with booster for her immune system and 
we have also used Chinese herbs previously too and Enisyl-F. I have a second 
adult cat who I test annually who is also given a vaccine against this. 

I am hopeful that my 3 year old will not develop the illnesses but at this time 
have not been reacting other than boosting her immune system. 

Others on line have much more experience than me and I’m sure will add more 
info. Despite the illness and what may come, these are wonderful fur babies 
whose life may be cut shorter yet quality and love is yours. 

Good luck, and don’t be afraid to give this little kitten the best life 
possible. Who knows what the future will hold

M

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 7, 2018, at 9:21 PM, JoAnne Kraun  wrote:
> 
> I recently adopted a kitten from a rehoming site online.  He was born on 
> March 20, he was a little over 8 weeks when I got him.  He was covered in 
> fleas so I took him straight to the vet.  They said he also had tapeworms.  
> He was treated for fleas and tapeworms and received his first series of 
> vaccines.  His weight was 2.1 lbs.  They tested him for FIV and FeLV.  About 
> 10 minutes after I got home, they called me and told me he tested positive 
> for FeLV, a faint positive.  I have been doing a lot of research and I have 
> been told that a faint positive could just mean that the disease is starting 
> and he will have a normal positive next time he is tested, and also that a 
> faint positive is the same as a regular positive. He is not sick now.  He 
> eats a lot.  I have been feeding him Orijen dry food and both Weruva and 
> Wellness Core canned food.  He seems to be gaining weight.  He looks good and 
> he is a very active and vocal kitten.  He is very affectionate and loves my 
> Cavalier Spaniel, who he likes to snuggle with after he wears himself at 
> night.
> 
> Because he was so young when he was diagnosed, everything I have read online 
> indicates that he will probably only live for a few months to a year before 
> he starts to get sick.  I have never had a cat with this disease.   
> Everything I find online indicates that most kittens will not be able to  
> clear the virus and will live 2-3 years if we are lucky.
> 
> I am wondering if there are some supplements I can get him started on now, 
> before he starts to get sick.  Regardless of how long I have him, he will be 
> loved and cared for.  He is already very spoiled.   I just can't even picture 
> this little guy being sick.  He is such a good little cat.  I call him Q.  
> 
> I just lost my 17 year old Himalayan Persian to cancer a few months ago.  I 
> haven't had a kitten for 17 years.  I have 3 dogs and thought that an adult 
> cat may be too stressed around my big dogs.  The Cavalier is fine, but I also 
> have 2 Akitas.  My other cat was fine with the Akitas.  She was not afraid of 
> them at all.  Q does not seem to be afraid of them, either, and he lets them 
> give him kisses.  I do separate Q from the Akitas when I am not around 
> because one of the is very playful and I am afraid that she would try to play 
> with Q.  The Akitas are over 100 lbs so he could get hurt so easily.  Q seems 
> to be a very laid back kitten, he does not scare easily and purrs whenever he 
> is around us.
> 
> What can I expect?  Will he start getting sick in a few months?  Do they just 
> quit eating or what happens?   I would like to think that Q will be one of 
> the lucky ones that lives for over 10 years, but I know I need to be 
> realistic.  I just want him to have the best quality of life that he can have 
> with us.
> 
> 
> 
> JoAnne
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