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My 2 positives, Tucson and Romeo, were s/n before I even knew they were
positive (ignorance is bliss-LOL) and there was absolutely no problem.
Christiane Biagi
Cell: 914-720-6888
ti...@mindspring.com
Volunteer-St. Bernard Parish Animal Shelter
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sbpshelter/sets/72157
I've had no problem with it -
Gloria
On Feb 10, 2009, at 4:08 PM, Lorrie wrote:
I have had two FelV pos. kittens neutered at 6 months with no
problems, but of course a spay is a much more invasive proceedure.
I will be interested in knowing what others on the list have done.
Lorrie
On 02-1
My vet said that most FELV cats do fine after spaying. There is some risk but
there is some risk for all spays. She said they are more likely to have
problems from not being spayed than from the spay itself.
Tanya
--- On Tue, 2/10/09, Lorrie wrote:
> From: Lorrie
> Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Sp
You may want to have someone do it who uses a laserless bleeding
and easier recovery.
On Feb 10, 2009, at 5:28 PM, gary wrote:
If she were my kitty, I would have her spayed. Yes, there is some
stress
involved in having it done, but there is also stress every time she
goes
into heat. T
If she were my kitty, I would have her spayed. Yes, there is some stress
involved in having it done, but there is also stress every time she goes
into heat. There are other advantages to having her spayed, like a much
reduced chance of mammary cancer, etc. I have had many positive kitties
spayed
Here is my Mom's obituary as promised for those of you that cared and ask.
_http://www.legacy.com/HeraldNet/Obituaries.asp?Page=LifeStory&PersonId=123980
404_
(http://www.legacy.com/HeraldNet/Obituaries.asp?Page=LifeStory&PersonId=123980404)
Please vote!
_http://www.care2.com/
My Mandy, now 7, was spayed four years ago--no problem at all as far as
stress affecting her leukemia-positive status. She is still doing great
today.
- Original Message -
From: "Marci Greer"
To:
Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 2:37 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Felvtalk Digest, Vol
I have had two FelV pos. kittens neutered at 6 months with no
problems, but of course a spay is a much more invasive proceedure.
I will be interested in knowing what others on the list have done.
Lorrie
On 02-10, Marci Greer wrote:
>
> Hi All,
>
> I have a FELV+ kitty, Maddie 3 yrs old who cam
Does the vet tell you what he thinks caused the dermatitis? Is it only in
some patches or spread throughout? Does she scratch herself or does she
lick herself bald?
Chris
ti...@mindspring.com
-Original Message-
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleu
Please,
can anyone help me?
My cat has dermatitis and she keeps on taking away her hair. I don't know
what to think! My vet says we have to wait but the cat gets worse.
Stefania
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Hi All,
I have a FELV+ kitty, Maddie 3 yrs old who came as a stray to us in October
2008, she is strictly indoors now, she is on interferon, and she is eating
well, gaining weight, playing, lovable, etc. She has not been spayed, My vet
who wanted to put her to sleep in October just because sh
One thing on transmission== a vet once told me... Both viruses have been
around since the time of the dinosaurs==if they were that easily
transmitted, we would have no cats left! I think that the trouble is that
vets generally see kittens who succumb because they are young and can't
fight off inf
Stef --
Sorry you're having all this trouble and worry right now.
About FIV, you are right and your vet is wrong. It is VERY hard to transmit
other than through fighting (deep bites) and sex. It's much less "contagious"
than FeLV, and even FeLV appears to be not as contagious as originally
I don't mean to intrude here, but what type of gel did you get for the
stomatitis?Debbie (COL)"The time is always right to do what is right" - Martin
Luther King> Date: Tue, 10 Feb 2009 18:33:49 +> From: pebble...@yahoo.it>
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org> Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] PCR test
Hi Chris,
thank-you very much for sharing your story. The problem here is that in these
days I read very much on FeLV and FIV and I agree with you. My cats have always
been together (except for Trudi, who is a lone wolf), they play, groom each
other and they eat together even if they have one b
Stefania,
I should never answer in a hurry. I was headed out the door. I hope you
could understand what I was saying. I meant to say supportive care not
cats...lol Although supportive cats would be ok.
On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 7:50 AM, Sally Davis wrote:
> Stefania
>
> My story is very similiar
Stef
Just info for you--I have 4 cats who basically grew up together. They're
about a year or so apart in age and all came in as kittens and all tested
neg for FELV as each came into my home. In 2/04, my Tucson who was then 4,
started feeling poorly, wouldn't eat (which for her is a BIG thing!).
Hi,
> Give them suppotive cats good food and lots of love.
Yes, I already use good food of quality and in fact I have this infected cat
since 2007 and he's living very well. I hope my older too will regain energy
and be well again, even if I know that their destiny will be to develop
something
Stefania
My story is very similiar to yousr. I too adopted a shelter cat who as it
turned out was positive for FIV/FELV. I think he was the source of infection
in my cats and I wound up with 4 cats dying. I am so sorry to hear this.
Give them suppotive cats good food and lots of love. I do not bla
> I am certainly not diagnosing your cat. In humans a smooth
> tongue is a symptom of anemia. Anemia is common in FELV cats. Are her
> gums pale? I had severe anemia and my tongue was very sore as well. >Could be
> why she is not grooming it hurts.
>
Thank-you Sally and all! I don't think she h
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