I also agree, I'd use the antibiotic. The bacteria have to be killed before
they get out of hand.
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 27, 2012, at 9:47 AM, GRAS wrote:
> As much as I try not to overuse antibiotics, in cases of animals with
> suppressed immune systems, one should be vigilant not to all
I agree, when they are sick, it is off to the vet ASAP. Then if I had plans, I
cancel. People who know how you feel about your furbabies will understand. My
babies come first and everyone who knowsme knows that.
Beth wrote:
> When my FeLV cats are sick I don't even go to the movies wit
Please, take him to the ER if your vet is not opened. This may be life
threatening.
Please keep us posted. I will be thinking of him!
- Original Message -
From: Rashel Mereness
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 12:12 PM
Subject: [Felvtalk] Is my
When my FeLV cats are sick I don't even go to the movies without having a pet
sittet check on them.
Beth
GRAS wrote:
>BTW - it's never a good idea to leave a pet being taken care of by someone
>who knows nothing about animals.in the future, try to get a pet owner who
>can recognize a real prob
BTW - it's never a good idea to leave a pet being taken care of by someone
who knows nothing about animals.in the future, try to get a pet owner who
can recognize a real problem! There are professional pet services that can
be pricey, but if you call a rescue group, they can often recommend a
res
get the kitten to the vetQUICK!!! after 2 days of not eating, cats can
start getting liver damage
From: Lorrie
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 5:28 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Is my kitten having his first FIV/FELV episode?
Please rush him to the vet immediately.
On 02-27, Rashel Mereness wrote:
>Hi - I'm new and have been reading the threads but I don't seen
>anything that addresses my situation. We have an 8 month old kitty
>that tested positive for FIV (or was it FELV?) at a young age, and
You've gotten good advice to see a vet. Both of my FeLV cats developed lymphoma
at an early age with the symptoms you describe. They both receive chemo (one
for 20 months and the other for 3) and both are doing well. It is a scary
diagnosis, but just wanted you up know that if it is what your ki
Distressed breathing could be a sign of anemia, but there is no time to waste
posting on the internet. Please get him to a vet ASAP. If your breathing was
like this you would go to a doctor.
Don't Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org
From: Rashel Mere
Rapid breathing is pain. Get him to vet.
M
http://homelessnomore.webs.com/___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
I agree, a vet visit is advised.
First, recheck your records. FIV is very different than Felv. You would
prefer to be dealing with FIV. If it was felv then you may be in for a
very rough road.
Rapid breathing can be from anemia, pain, fluid in the chest, heart
failure, infection (like pneumoni
If unit were only anemia, PetTinic would help, but without any diagnosis,
this little cat must see a good vet!
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Terri Brown
Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 1:37 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sounds to me like the anemia is getting the better of him (if he was FeLV +).
=^..^= Terri, Guinevere, Travis, Dori, Kimiko and 8 furangels: Ruthie,
Samantha,
Arielle, Gareth, Alec, Salome, Sammi and Siggie the Tomato Vampire
=^..^=
- Original Message -
From: Rashel Mer
Get him to the vet. Could be several things but the heavy breathing isn't
good. I had a 2 year old that had a tumor in her chest and it ruptured. We
didn't know she had FeLV because she tested negative as a kitten. Anyway the
tumor which is usually caused by FeLV, ruptured her heart so she
Hi - I'm new and have been reading the threads but I don't seen anything that
addresses my situation. We have an 8 month old kitty that tested positive for
FIV (or was it FELV?) at a young age, and we plan to get him retested. He has
been healthy, playful and had a great appetite. A few weeks ag
As much as I try not to overuse antibiotics, in cases of animals with
suppressed immune systems, one should be vigilant not to allow any infection
to take more hold because it may take more antibiotics in the long run. If
gums are inflamed, first sign of anything more serious, and if the vet
belie
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