[Felvtalk] FeLV and Fleas??

2013-11-04 Thread Michelle B
Hi guys,

I am pretty familiar with FeLV but heard something that is alarming and am 
hoping there is someone that can give feedback on this. 

Our rescue took in a nursing mother cat and her two kittens and a 5 month old 
kitten, unrelated, at the same time. These cats were in the same quarantine 
room but in separate holding pens (having no direct contact with each other). 
The 5 month kitten tested strong positive for FeLV and does have very large 
nodes. She also had a bad case of fleas. 

I read that FeLV can be transmitted through fleas - has anyone done research, 
or spoken with a well qualified veterinarian about this?

The mother cat and her kittens have not shown any evidence of fleas or fleas 
dirt but I am still concerned about this potential for transmission, especially 
since they are newborns.

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Re: [Felvtalk] FeLV and Fleas??

2013-11-04 Thread Lee Evans
Haemobartonella fellis is transmitted by fleas, not FeLv. You can Google 
Haemobartonella and find out about it. That's why it's recommended that you 
treat all current cats for fleas with Frontline Plus or other flea product if 
you intend to bring a new cat/kitten into the house. The fleas actually carry 
the haemobart parasitic bacteria and when biting a cat, inject it. FeLv is a 
retrovirus mostly contagious through strong contact cat to cat. Even then, one 
cat may have a strong enough immune system not to get the disease.





On Monday, November 4, 2013 1:52 PM, Michelle B teals...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 
Hi guys,

I am pretty familiar with FeLV but heard something that is alarming and am 
hoping there is someone that can give feedback on this. 

Our rescue took in a nursing mother cat and her two kittens and a 5 month old 
kitten, unrelated, at the same time. These cats were in the same quarantine 
room but in separate holding pens (having no direct contact with each other). 
The 5 month kitten tested strong positive for FeLV and does have very large 
nodes. She also had a bad case of fleas. 

I read that FeLV can be transmitted through fleas - has anyone done research, 
or spoken with a well qualified veterinarian about this?

The mother cat and her kittens have not shown any evidence of fleas or fleas 
dirt but I am still concerned about this potential for transmission, 
especially since they are newborns.



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Re: [Felvtalk] FeLV and Fleas??

2013-11-04 Thread Michelle B
Thank you Lee, I really appreciate that!  =)

We do treat all cats for fleas as soon as they come in but did not treat the 
nursing mother and newborns for obvious reasons and have instead been doing the 
flea comb. This possible flea transmission was new to me so I was very alarmed. 
We always quarantine 'new' cats and test and then re-test after two months to 
make sure they are negative before we allow them to go into the general 
population.  Flea transmission would have changed everything though.

Date: Mon, 4 Nov 2013 12:02:35 -0800
From: moonsiste...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FeLV and Fleas??

Haemobartonella fellis is transmitted by fleas, not FeLv. You can Google 
Haemobartonella and find out about it. That's why it's recommended that you 
treat all current cats for fleas with Frontline Plus or other flea product if 
you intend to bring a new cat/kitten into the house. The fleas actually carry 
the haemobart parasitic bacteria and when biting a cat, inject it. FeLv is a 
retrovirus mostly contagious through strong contact cat to cat. Even then, one 
cat may have a strong enough immune system not to get the disease.   On 
Monday, November 4, 2013 1:52 PM, Michelle B teals...@hotmail.com wrote: 


Hi guys,I am pretty familiar with FeLV but heard something that is alarming and 
am hoping there is someone that can give feedback on this. Our rescue took in a 
nursing mother cat and her two kittens and a 5 month old kitten, unrelated, at 
the same time. These cats were in the same quarantine room but in separate 
holding pens (having no direct contact with each other). The 5 month kitten 
tested strong positive for FeLV and does have very large nodes. She also had a 
bad case of fleas. I read that FeLV can be transmitted through fleas - has 
anyone done research, or spoken with a well qualified veterinarian about 
this?The mother cat and her kittens have not shown any evidence of fleas or 
fleas dirt but I am still concerned about this potential for transmission, 
especially
 since they are newborns. 
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Re: [Felvtalk] FeLV and Fleas??

2013-11-04 Thread Beth
Here are a couple links to suggest FeLV can be passed by fleas:

http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheNcpsidt=15342194 
http://www.chatvet.com/flv.htm

Beth

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



 From: Lee Evans moonsiste...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Monday, November 4, 2013 3:02 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FeLV and Fleas??
 


Haemobartonella fellis is transmitted by fleas, not FeLv. You can Google 
Haemobartonella and find out about it. That's why it's recommended that you 
treat all current cats for fleas with Frontline Plus or other flea product if 
you intend to bring a new cat/kitten into the house. The fleas actually carry 
the haemobart parasitic bacteria and when biting a cat, inject it. FeLv is a 
retrovirus mostly contagious through strong contact cat to cat. Even then, one 
cat may have a strong enough immune system not to get the disease.





On Monday, November 4, 2013 1:52 PM, Michelle B teals...@hotmail.com wrote:
 
 
Hi guys,

I am pretty familiar with FeLV but heard something that is alarming and am 
hoping there is someone that can give feedback on this. 

Our rescue took in a nursing mother cat and her two kittens and a 5 month old 
kitten, unrelated, at the same time. These cats were in the same quarantine 
room but in separate holding pens (having no direct contact with each other). 
The 5 month kitten tested strong positive for FeLV and does have very large 
nodes. She also had a bad case of fleas. 

I read that FeLV can be transmitted through fleas - has anyone done research, 
or spoken with a well qualified veterinarian about this?

The mother cat and her kittens have not shown any evidence of fleas or fleas 
dirt but I am still concerned about this potential for transmission, especially
 since they are newborns.



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