Re: [Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat

2014-07-06 Thread pipercat...@yahoo.com
I've mixed Felv+ cats with adult vaccinated negative cats for years and have 
never had a transmission that I am aware of. I've had other cats retested only 
as part of the diagnostic process when they have become ill and have never had 
a positive test. I personally don't think Felv is as easily transmitted as its 
reputation suggests.

Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE DROID

Lance  wrote:

>I think this is a personal choice that owners who have both FeLV- and FeLV+ 
>must make on their own. Vaccinating negative cats does a good job of 
>protecting them from the virus, but it’s not 100% guaranteed (no vaccine is). 
>I’ve read it’s more like 85-90%, but I don’t have a reference in front of me. 
>Google for a credible source like the American Association of Feline 
>Practitioners.  Also, cats that are one year old or older have a certain 
>*unknown* level of natural protection, as their immune systems are fully 
>online. Young kittens have weak protection or none at all until their immune 
>systems have matured.
>
>Aside from the vaccine and natural protection, unvaccinated adult cats that 
>are not bitten require extensive, continued exposure (mainly via mutual 
>grooming and shared dishes) over a long period of time (sometimes many months) 
>to contract the disease, which is why we sometimes find negatives who have 
>been living with undiagnosed positives for years. I’ve seen this with my own 
>eyes under my own roof.
>
>Short version: if the negative cat is a vaccinated adult, and its relationship 
>with the positive cat is friendly, the negative cat will not likely become 
>infected. It’s not impossible; just not that likely.
>
>If the proper steps are taken and all cats involved are over a year old, this 
>ends up being a matter of the guardian’s comfort level. Some people are 
>unnerved by the prospect, while numerous others have vaccinated negs and never 
>seen them get infected despite extensive interaction with positives.
>
>Lance
>
>On Jul 6, 2014, at 8:48 PM, Grant, Mary A.  wrote:
>
>> Everything I've read about felv is that it's highly contagious not only from 
>> fighting, but from saliva as well. We kept our cats separated from our felv+ 
>> kitten for six weeks as they were getting the vaccinations.
>> 
>> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
>>  Original Message
>> From: dlg...@windstream.net
>> Sent: Sunday, July 6, 2014 7:12 PM
>> To: Lee Evans; felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
>> Reply To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
>> Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat
>> 
>> 
>> WHY do you have to keep him in a their own  room?  when I got Annie and a 
>> few years later, Nitnoy , everyone ate, slept in the whole house.  No one 
>> else has ever tested + for felv.  They fuss, hissing, slapping, but that is 
>> the extent of fighting.  That way, no one is isloated and unhappy.
>> 
>>  Lee Evans  wrote:
>>> My friend just rescued a young male cat who has tested positive for FeLv. I 
>>> usually foster these cats until they either turn or I keep them and allow 
>>> them to live their lives in a room of their own. The problem now is that I 
>>> don't have a room for fostering FeLv+ cats. My two spare rooms are taken 
>>> with other emergency fosters who will be with me for the rest of their 
>>> lives. One room has three of my own cats who lost a lot of weight due to 
>>> stress. They don't much like being with 20 other cats in the general cat 
>>> room so I had to isolate the Skinny Three and feed them extra. They are 
>>> making a come back except for Moses. I intend to take him to the 
>>> veterinarian this coming week. He was one of the FeLv+ cats who turned 
>>> negative after a 3 month stay in isolation. He has been with me for 7 years 
>>> now and is probably suffering from old age and other issues not related to 
>>> his former FeLv status. The second foster room is taken with one-eyed cats 
>>> who can't be
>>> released into my general community because they might get into fights and 
>>> have their remaining eye injured. Fortunately they bonded with each other 
>>> and enjoy the company and food.
>>> 
>>> What I really need is a foster home for the rescued FeLv+ cat so he will 
>>> have a chance to turn negative. Does anyone know anyone in the vicinity of 
>>> San Antonio, Texas to Austin, Texas who could foster the latest rescue. My 
>>> friend has him at the vet clinic right now but she can't afford to keep him 
>>> there much longer. If you have a friend, relative, anyone you know within a 
>>> 75 mile radius of San Antonio, Texas who might be willing to foster or 
>>> adopt, please email me at moonsiste...@yahoo.com. Thanks.
>> 
>> 
>> ___
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>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> This message contains information which may be confidential and privileged.

Re: [Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat

2014-07-06 Thread Lance
I think this is a personal choice that owners who have both FeLV- and FeLV+ 
must make on their own. Vaccinating negative cats does a good job of protecting 
them from the virus, but it’s not 100% guaranteed (no vaccine is). I’ve read 
it’s more like 85-90%, but I don’t have a reference in front of me. Google for 
a credible source like the American Association of Feline Practitioners.  Also, 
cats that are one year old or older have a certain *unknown* level of natural 
protection, as their immune systems are fully online. Young kittens have weak 
protection or none at all until their immune systems have matured.

Aside from the vaccine and natural protection, unvaccinated adult cats that are 
not bitten require extensive, continued exposure (mainly via mutual grooming 
and shared dishes) over a long period of time (sometimes many months) to 
contract the disease, which is why we sometimes find negatives who have been 
living with undiagnosed positives for years. I’ve seen this with my own eyes 
under my own roof.

Short version: if the negative cat is a vaccinated adult, and its relationship 
with the positive cat is friendly, the negative cat will not likely become 
infected. It’s not impossible; just not that likely.

If the proper steps are taken and all cats involved are over a year old, this 
ends up being a matter of the guardian’s comfort level. Some people are 
unnerved by the prospect, while numerous others have vaccinated negs and never 
seen them get infected despite extensive interaction with positives.

Lance

On Jul 6, 2014, at 8:48 PM, Grant, Mary A.  wrote:

> Everything I've read about felv is that it's highly contagious not only from 
> fighting, but from saliva as well. We kept our cats separated from our felv+ 
> kitten for six weeks as they were getting the vaccinations.
> 
> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
>  Original Message
> From: dlg...@windstream.net
> Sent: Sunday, July 6, 2014 7:12 PM
> To: Lee Evans; felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
> Reply To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
> Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat
> 
> 
> WHY do you have to keep him in a their own  room?  when I got Annie and a few 
> years later, Nitnoy , everyone ate, slept in the whole house.  No one else 
> has ever tested + for felv.  They fuss, hissing, slapping, but that is the 
> extent of fighting.  That way, no one is isloated and unhappy.
> 
>  Lee Evans  wrote:
>> My friend just rescued a young male cat who has tested positive for FeLv. I 
>> usually foster these cats until they either turn or I keep them and allow 
>> them to live their lives in a room of their own. The problem now is that I 
>> don't have a room for fostering FeLv+ cats. My two spare rooms are taken 
>> with other emergency fosters who will be with me for the rest of their 
>> lives. One room has three of my own cats who lost a lot of weight due to 
>> stress. They don't much like being with 20 other cats in the general cat 
>> room so I had to isolate the Skinny Three and feed them extra. They are 
>> making a come back except for Moses. I intend to take him to the 
>> veterinarian this coming week. He was one of the FeLv+ cats who turned 
>> negative after a 3 month stay in isolation. He has been with me for 7 years 
>> now and is probably suffering from old age and other issues not related to 
>> his former FeLv status. The second foster room is taken with one-eyed cats 
>> who can't be
>> released into my general community because they might get into fights and 
>> have their remaining eye injured. Fortunately they bonded with each other 
>> and enjoy the company and food.
>> 
>> What I really need is a foster home for the rescued FeLv+ cat so he will 
>> have a chance to turn negative. Does anyone know anyone in the vicinity of 
>> San Antonio, Texas to Austin, Texas who could foster the latest rescue. My 
>> friend has him at the vet clinic right now but she can't afford to keep him 
>> there much longer. If you have a friend, relative, anyone you know within a 
>> 75 mile radius of San Antonio, Texas who might be willing to foster or 
>> adopt, please email me at moonsiste...@yahoo.com. Thanks.
> 
> 
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> 
> 
> 
> 
> This message contains information which may be confidential and privileged. 
> Unless you are the addressee (or authorized to receive for the addressee), 
> you may not use, copy or disclose to anyone the message or any information 
> contained in the message. If you have received the message in error, please 
> advise the sender by reply e-mail mgr...@mofo.com, and delete the message.
> 
> 
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Re: [Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat

2014-07-06 Thread Grant, Mary A.
Everything I've read about felv is that it's highly contagious not only from 
fighting, but from saliva as well. We kept our cats separated from our felv+ 
kitten for six weeks as they were getting the vaccinations.

Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
  Original Message
From: dlg...@windstream.net
Sent: Sunday, July 6, 2014 7:12 PM
To: Lee Evans; felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Reply To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat


WHY do you have to keep him in a their own  room?  when I got Annie and a few 
years later, Nitnoy , everyone ate, slept in the whole house.  No one else has 
ever tested + for felv.  They fuss, hissing, slapping, but that is the extent 
of fighting.  That way, no one is isloated and unhappy.

 Lee Evans  wrote:
> My friend just rescued a young male cat who has tested positive for FeLv. I 
> usually foster these cats until they either turn or I keep them and allow 
> them to live their lives in a room of their own. The problem now is that I 
> don't have a room for fostering FeLv+ cats. My two spare rooms are taken with 
> other emergency fosters who will be with me for the rest of their lives. One 
> room has three of my own cats who lost a lot of weight due to stress. They 
> don't much like being with 20 other cats in the general cat room so I had to 
> isolate the Skinny Three and feed them extra. They are making a come back 
> except for Moses. I intend to take him to the veterinarian this coming week. 
> He was one of the FeLv+ cats who turned negative after a 3 month stay in 
> isolation. He has been with me for 7 years now and is probably suffering from 
> old age and other issues not related to his former FeLv status. The second 
> foster room is taken with one-eyed cats who can't be
>  released into my general community because they might get into fights and 
> have their remaining eye injured. Fortunately they bonded with each other and 
> enjoy the company and food.
>
> What I really need is a foster home for the rescued FeLv+ cat so he will have 
> a chance to turn negative. Does anyone know anyone in the vicinity of San 
> Antonio, Texas to Austin, Texas who could foster the latest rescue. My friend 
> has him at the vet clinic right now but she can't afford to keep him there 
> much longer. If you have a friend, relative, anyone you know within a 75 mile 
> radius of San Antonio, Texas who might be willing to foster or adopt, please 
> email me at moonsiste...@yahoo.com. Thanks.


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This message contains information which may be confidential and privileged. 
Unless you are the addressee (or authorized to receive for the addressee), you 
may not use, copy or disclose to anyone the message or any information 
contained in the message. If you have received the message in error, please 
advise the sender by reply e-mail mgr...@mofo.com, and delete the message.


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Re: [Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat

2014-07-06 Thread dlgegg
WHY do you have to keep him in a their own  room?  when I got Annie and a few 
years later, Nitnoy , everyone ate, slept in the whole house.  No one else has 
ever tested + for felv.  They fuss, hissing, slapping, but that is the extent 
of fighting.  That way, no one is isloated and unhappy.

 Lee Evans  wrote: 
> My friend just rescued a young male cat who has tested positive for FeLv. I 
> usually foster these cats until they either turn or I keep them and allow 
> them to live their lives in a room of their own. The problem now is that I 
> don't have a room for fostering FeLv+ cats. My two spare rooms are taken with 
> other emergency fosters who will be with me for the rest of their lives. One 
> room has three of my own cats who lost a lot of weight due to stress. They 
> don't much like being with 20 other cats in the general cat room so I had to 
> isolate the Skinny Three and feed them extra. They are making a come back 
> except for Moses. I intend to take him to the veterinarian this coming week. 
> He was one of the FeLv+ cats who turned negative after a 3 month stay in 
> isolation. He has been with me for 7 years now and is probably suffering from 
> old age and other issues not related to his former FeLv status. The second 
> foster room is taken with one-eyed cats who can't be
>  released into my general community because they might get into fights and 
> have their remaining eye injured. Fortunately they bonded with each other and 
> enjoy the company and food.
> 
> What I really need is a foster home for the rescued FeLv+ cat so he will have 
> a chance to turn negative. Does anyone know anyone in the vicinity of San 
> Antonio, Texas to Austin, Texas who could foster the latest rescue. My friend 
> has him at the vet clinic right now but she can't afford to keep him there 
> much longer. If you have a friend, relative, anyone you know within a 75 mile 
> radius of San Antonio, Texas who might be willing to foster or adopt, please 
> email me at moonsiste...@yahoo.com. Thanks.


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[Felvtalk] Tested Positive Cat

2014-07-06 Thread Lee Evans
My friend just rescued a young male cat who has tested positive for FeLv. I 
usually foster these cats until they either turn or I keep them and allow them 
to live their lives in a room of their own. The problem now is that I don't 
have a room for fostering FeLv+ cats. My two spare rooms are taken with other 
emergency fosters who will be with me for the rest of their lives. One room has 
three of my own cats who lost a lot of weight due to stress. They don't much 
like being with 20 other cats in the general cat room so I had to isolate the 
Skinny Three and feed them extra. They are making a come back except for Moses. 
I intend to take him to the veterinarian this coming week. He was one of the 
FeLv+ cats who turned negative after a 3 month stay in isolation. He has been 
with me for 7 years now and is probably suffering from old age and other issues 
not related to his former FeLv status. The second foster room is taken with 
one-eyed cats who can't be
 released into my general community because they might get into fights and have 
their remaining eye injured. Fortunately they bonded with each other and enjoy 
the company and food.

What I really need is a foster home for the rescued FeLv+ cat so he will have a 
chance to turn negative. Does anyone know anyone in the vicinity of San 
Antonio, Texas to Austin, Texas who could foster the latest rescue. My friend 
has him at the vet clinic right now but she can't afford to keep him there much 
longer. If you have a friend, relative, anyone you know within a 75 mile radius 
of San Antonio, Texas who might be willing to foster or adopt, please email me 
at moonsiste...@yahoo.com. Thanks.
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