Re: Treating nose sore

2006-08-28 Thread wendy
Hi Giselle,

I have no advice to offer, other than go see a good
vet about this.  Do you think it could be ringworm? 
You'll want to nip this in the bud immediately. 
Welcome to the group!

:)
Wendy

--- G D [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


-

Hello everyone, I've been a silent member of the
listserv since March and have been learning a lot from
your discussions and feeling your sorrows as loved
ones pass away. I'm now writing for advice -- my Pixie
is a largely asymptomatic  2 y/o felv positive and in
early August we moved from Philadelphia to the
Netherlands (flew Northwest so she could be in the
cabin with me). 

A few days ago I noticed a small bald patch on the
side of her nose and it's been growing in size and is
now looking red and irritated. I've been looking up
possible causes and I'm scared that it could be feline
calicivirus because she has eye discharge, a wet nose,
audible breathing, and the occasional sneeze. Does
anyone have experience with calicivirus, especially in
combination with felv? 

Perhaps another, happier, explanation could be that
Pixie is weirded out by the new environment and is
over-grooming? I tried putting Polysporin on the sore
a couple of times today and she's successfully groomed
it off almost immediately. Any tips on treating the
sore -- possible viral causes aside? 

Pixie is eating normally and seems fine other than the
aforementioned symptoms. I should also note that I
gave her dewormer for roundworm two weeks ago, after
finding some worms in her vomit. Not sure those worms
are totally gone, either. Any advice would be much
appreciated! She's my first felv cat and I'm thinking
of adopting another (Dutch) one soon, once I know
what's up with Pixie... and where to even find a felv
cat in the Netherlands. 

Cheers, Giselle




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Treating nose sore

2006-08-27 Thread G D
Hello everyone, I've been a silent member of the listserv since March and have been learning a lot from your discussions and feeling your sorrows as loved ones pass away. I'm now writing for advice -- my Pixie is a largely asymptomatic 2 y/o felv positive and in early August we moved from Philadelphia to the Netherlands (flew Northwest so she could be in the cabin with me). 
A few days ago I noticed a small bald patch on the side of her nose and it's been growing in size and is now looking red and irritated. I've been looking up possible causes and I'm scared that it could be feline calicivirus because she has eye discharge, a wet nose, audible breathing, and the occasional sneeze. Does anyone have experience with calicivirus, especially in combination with felv? 
Perhaps another, happier, explanation could be that Pixie is weirded out by the new environment and is over-grooming? I tried putting Polysporin on the sore a couple of times today and she's successfully groomed it off almost immediately. Any tips on treating the sore -- possible viral causes aside? 
Pixie is eating normally and seems fine other than the aforementioned symptoms. I should also note that I gave her dewormer for roundworm two weeks ago, after finding some worms in her vomit. Not sure those worms are totally gone, either. Any advice would be much appreciated! She's my first felv cat and I'm thinking of adopting another (Dutch) one soon, once I know what's up with Pixie... and where toeven find a felv cat in the Netherlands.
Cheers, Giselle




Re: Treating nose sore

2006-08-27 Thread Susan Hoffman
Did she get the basic FVRCP vaccines? That covers calicivirus. Could it be ringworm?G D [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:  Hello everyone, I've been a silent member of the listserv since March and have been learning a lot from your discussions and feeling your sorrows as loved ones pass away. I'm now writing for advice -- my Pixie is a largely asymptomatic 2 y/o felv positive and in early August we moved from Philadelphia to the Netherlands (flew Northwest so she could be in the cabin with me).   A few days ago I noticed a small bald patch on the side of her nose and it's been growing in size and is now looking red and irritated. I've been looking up possible causes and I'm scared that it could be feline calicivirus because she has eye discharge, a wet nose, audible breathing, and the occasional sneeze. Does
 anyone have experience with calicivirus, especially in combination with felv?   Perhaps another, happier, explanation could be that Pixie is weirded out by the new environment and is over-grooming? I tried putting Polysporin on the sore a couple of times today and she's successfully groomed it off almost immediately. Any tips on treating the sore -- possible viral causes aside?   Pixie is eating normally and seems fine other than the aforementioned symptoms. I should also note that I gave her dewormer for roundworm two weeks ago, after finding some worms in her vomit. Not sure those worms are totally gone, either. Any advice would be much appreciated! She's my first felv cat and I'm thinking of adopting another (Dutch) one soon, once I know what's up with Pixie... and where toeven find a felv cat in the Netherlands.  Cheers, Giselle

Re: Treating nose sore

2006-08-27 Thread Lernermichelle



Giselle,
 Pixie might have a URI. Sometimes the stress of moving 
does that. For the URI symptoms, I recommend a few doses of 
Immuno-regulin.

 The bald patch could be ringworm. It often looks like you 
describe it. There have been some discussions on this list about treating 
ringworm. You don't want to treat for it unless Pixie has it, though, so you 
might want to get it looked at and/or cultured by a vet.

Michelle