Re: [Felvtalk] seeking advice for treating FeLV positive old CKD cats with the new drugs

2013-04-25 Thread Sharon Catalan
Hello Catherine,

My cat Mr Gray is about 14 years old.  3 years ago, he was diagnosed with Felv. 
 He gets regular shots of Felv and today, he's healthier than ever.  Try it.  
It may lengthen the life of your kitty.  

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 24, 2013, at 12:46 PM, I-Chun C. C. Chang  changic...@gmail.com 
wrote:

 
 Dear Felvalk friends, 
 
 I am very new to this group and was hoping to get some advice for the 
 treatment  about my currently very sick cat.
 
 My cat is 16 years old, who came to the States with me 6 years ago. I got her 
 when she was 7 (she was abandoned by the previous house owner...)  After I 
 got her, she was tested twice negative for FeLV and vaccinated for four 
 years. From then she has been a totally indoor cat. I later adopted another 
 cat,  who was also tested negative twice and vaccinated for three years.  
 From then on, since they have been complete indoor apartment cats with no 
 exposure to other cats and the little one always got some reaction to the 
 vaccine, we stopped vaccinating them for FeLV.
 
 Last Friday, my 16 years old cat was getting weak, my husband and I rushed 
 her to the ER and were told that she was in sever anemia (pcv less than 10%) 
 due to her chronic kidney disease. Two blood transfusions has been done, but 
 her response to blood transfusions was poor. Doctors then concerned that not 
 only her red blood cell count is low, her white blood cell count is also very 
 low. So the doctors ran the FeLV test again on Tuesday, and it came back 
 positive (!!) (we also rushed our younger one for test yesterday; but he 
 stays negative, and we added a booster vaccine on him). 
 
 We are getting our 16 years old back tonight. Doctors implicitly has 
 mentioned that FeLV has no cure, plus her Kidney situation (late stage CKD), 
 she may not live long... we were also suggested to consider putting her into 
 sleep soon. But I luckily found last night there is this emailist, and on the 
 website there are several drugs listed for possible treatment plans: 
 ImmunoRegulin, Acemannan, Interferon Alpha etc.  
 
 Do anyone in this emaillist have experience about treatment on old FeLV cat 
 with CKD by using these new drugs? If yes, may I learn your experience? I 
 really don't want to lose my girl in this way.I am getting my degree 
 soon, and do hope at least I can have her come back to my home country with 
 me... 
 
 Sorry for such a long email, and thank you very much!
 
 I. Catherine  
 
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Re: [Felvtalk] Question re positives negatives

2011-04-15 Thread Sharon Catalan
Hello Pam,

My 3 cats have been living together for 10 years now until my boy-cat was
just recently diagnosed with FeLV.  He may have contracted it 2 years ago
when he ran outside and got into a fight with another cat.  We had the 2
other girl-cats tested and they're both negative.  We had the 2 other
girl-cats vaccinated and currently, they are separated.  Doctor said that
they can be together 30days after the 2 other cats receive their 2nd shot of
FeLV vaccination.  Also, according to our doctor, it should be okay for them
to be together again as long as they don't bite/scratch each other or share
bodily fluids.  Just keep their feeding stuff completely separate.  My cats
never fight with each other although occasionally, the other cat will eat
someone's leftover and I think that is the reason that the 2 others cats
never contracted it considering that the other one had FeLV for quite some
time now.

Sharon

On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 11:00 AM, Pam Norman pam_nor...@charter.net wrote:

 I am trying to determine what to do with Poppy both now  when the IFA test
 results come in. I've been reading  reading  from what I can gather, the
 old dictums about NEVER havinig positive  negative cats even in the same
 house has been abandoned.  From what I have read, the general sense is that
 it's fine for positives  negatives to be in the same home, but should be
 separate so there is no chance of exchanging fluids such as with a bite, but
 more importantly with mutual grooming.   But I know also that some of you
 have both positives  negatives really living together, not separate. Right?

 What about if I put Poppy in her condo in the spare bedroom  let me cats
 visit, so at  least she SEES other cats.  What is she hisses  spits?  Would
 that have a chance of infecting any of mine who were nosing around her
 condo?  My feeling is that it would.

 Also how effective is the vaccine these days?  I know that some years ago
 the figure was about 30% so I never  had any of my cats vaccinated.  Has it
 been  improved?

 Right now we are still waiting for the IFA test for Poppy. And I guess she
 needs retesting on that in at least a month. I do NOT want to keep her alone
 until then.  We  have a sanctuary for her if she tests IFA positive cause
 then we know that she is really positive. But the person who runs it tells
  me that regardless of how she tests on the IFA, she HAS leukemia. Period.
  And would go in with the positive cats. But my understanding  is that if
 she is IFA negative, she has a chance of fighting it off  putting her in
 with the positives is giving up.  I think she should only go in with the
 positives if she tests IFA positive.

 Can anyone help me sort this out?

 Pam

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-- 
Sharon F Catalan
Cell: (408) 398-5647
Home: (408) 229-2298
Carpe Diem!
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Re: [Felvtalk] Question re positives negatives

2011-04-15 Thread Sharon Catalan
Hello Pam,
Yes, they did share everything for 10 years up until a month ago when we
found out that the other one is positive.  That is actually the biggest
mystery - the 2 other cats never got infected.  The doctor did say that we
should test them again every 6 months.

Sharon

On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 12:20 PM, Pam Norman pam_nor...@charter.net wrote:

 Sharon,

 What about grooming?  I would assume that those cats,  having lived
 together for 10 years, would mutually groom.  That's sharing bodily fluids 
 I would think would be potentially harmful to the negative ones.

 Pam


 On 4/15/2011 1:28 PM, Sharon Catalan wrote:

 Hello Pam,

 My 3 cats have been living together for 10 years now until my boy-cat was
 just recently diagnosed with FeLV.  He may have contracted it 2 years ago
 when he ran outside and got into a fight with another cat.  We had the 2
 other girl-cats tested and they're both negative.  We had the 2 other
 girl-cats vaccinated and currently, they are separated.  Doctor said that
 they can be together 30days after the 2 other cats receive their 2nd shot
 of
 FeLV vaccination.  Also, according to our doctor, it should be okay for
 them
 to be together again as long as they don't bite/scratch each other or
 share
 bodily fluids.  Just keep their feeding stuff completely separate.  My
 cats
 never fight with each other although occasionally, the other cat will eat
 someone's leftover and I think that is the reason that the 2 others cats
 never contracted it considering that the other one had FeLV for quite some
 time now.

 Sharon

 On Fri, Apr 15, 2011 at 11:00 AM, Pam Normanpam_nor...@charter.net
  wrote:

  I am trying to determine what to do with Poppy both now  when the IFA
 test
 results come in. I've been reading  reading  from what I can gather,
 the
 old dictums about NEVER havinig positive  negative cats even in the same
 house has been abandoned.  From what I have read, the general sense is
 that
 it's fine for positives  negatives to be in the same home, but should be
 separate so there is no chance of exchanging fluids such as with a bite,
 but
 more importantly with mutual grooming.   But I know also that some of you
 have both positives  negatives really living together, not separate.
 Right?

 What about if I put Poppy in her condo in the spare bedroom  let me cats
 visit, so at  least she SEES other cats.  What is she hisses  spits?
  Would
 that have a chance of infecting any of mine who were nosing around her
 condo?  My feeling is that it would.

 Also how effective is the vaccine these days?  I know that some years ago
 the figure was about 30% so I never  had any of my cats vaccinated.  Has
 it
 been  improved?

 Right now we are still waiting for the IFA test for Poppy. And I guess
 she
 needs retesting on that in at least a month. I do NOT want to keep her
 alone
 until then.  We  have a sanctuary for her if she tests IFA positive cause
 then we know that she is really positive. But the person who runs it
 tells
  me that regardless of how she tests on the IFA, she HAS leukemia.
 Period.
  And would go in with the positive cats. But my understanding  is that if
 she is IFA negative, she has a chance of fighting it off  putting her in
 with the positives is giving up.  I think she should only go in with the
 positives if she tests IFA positive.

 Can anyone help me sort this out?

 Pam

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-- 
Sharon F Catalan
Cell: (408) 398-5647
Home: (408) 229-2298
Carpe Diem!
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[Felvtalk] ImmunoRegulin

2011-03-29 Thread Sharon Catalan
Hello All,

I am new to the discussion board.  My cat Mr Gray has just been diagnosed
with FeLV.  He is not symptomatic yet although recently, he was also
diagnosed with Hyperthyroidism.  He is still very active and alert and
eating a lot.

I have been reading that ImmunoRegulin has been quite effective but I want
to know if any one of you out there tried it on their FeLV cats.  Any
response will be appreciated.  Thank you.

-- 
Sharon F Catalan
Carpe Diem!
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