Re: [Felvtalk] Hi, new member here

2011-11-04 Thread dlgegg
Give your rowdy little boy  a chance.  He sounds like my Harley, if there is 
trouble to get into, he does it.  I have 2 positives, Annie 4 years and Nitnoy 
we are not sure, maybe 3.  They are healthy, happy and loving cats.  Would not 
gie them up for anything.  Harley likes to help me on the computer.  He sas 
help, I say different.  Give him years of happiness and he will give you so 
much more back.
 Anne Myles  wrote: 
> Hi, wanted to introduce myself and my cats.
> 
> I adopted two new adult kitties from a rural no-kill shelter in my area 
> a little over a month ago, after my 15-year-old cat passed away.  Little 
> orange Dublin and hunky white and tabby C.J. are both about two years 
> old males -- Dublin more of an estimate since he was found as an adult 
> at a TNR station covered in oil on St. Patrick's Day (C.J. was in rescue 
> since he was about five months old).  I adopted them both as being FeLV 
> negative, though I'd found out that Dublin had initially had a positive 
> ELISA, then a negative when he was retested after six weeks in 
> quarantine.  The woman who runs the rescue swore to me (as her vet told 
> her) that false negatives are common but false positives are not.  Well, 
> so much for that; I know better now.  I had them retested after three 
> days at my house, because I learned that Dublin had had ten teeth 
> removed at a dental a few days before he came home and my vet's office 
> said that such bad teeth at a young age was a common sign of FeLV.  And 
> yup, Dublin's third ELISA was a strong positive, as was a follow-up 
> IFA.  C.J. tested negative, and got his first Purevax vaccination that 
> day, followed by the booster two weeks later.
> 
> I agonized for a few days about sending Dublin back to the rescue, where 
> he'd go to a FeLV+ cat sanctuary, but he is such a special, amazingly 
> sweet cat (gives hugs and kisses, just amazingly social) and was so 
> thrilled with me and my home and is absolutely crazily besotted with my 
> greyhound!  I couldn't break his little heart.  So I've kept  him, and 
> he and C.J. (also a wonderful, loving boy) mix, since C.J. was already 
> exposed to him at the rescue (along with most of their other cats!!).  I 
> am really heartened by what I've read in the archives about how many of 
> you have mixed cats without the negative ones converting.  I manage to 
> keep their food separate and change their water and scoop their litter 
> twice a day, but these guys play and wrestle a lot, which is nervous-making.
> 
> Except for the bad teeth, Dublin seems really healthy.  He did have a 
> bad case of chin acne when he came, but it's healed up really well.  He 
> eats voraciously and has gained some weight, has a lovely silky coat, 
> and is becoming quite a rowdy little troublemaker too, always pouncing 
> on C.J.'s tail (he never played at the rescue).  It's not unreasonable 
> to hope he might have a few good years, is it (though I know there's no 
> way to predict)?
> 
> I've also seen mention of various supplements you give, and I wish 
> someone could give me a lowdown on what you essentially recommend (that 
> is reasonably affordable) and exactly how you dose it.
> 
> Lots of pictures of the cats here if you want to see them:  
> http://s511.photobucket.com/albums/s357/PrairieProf/New%20cats/
> 
> Anne
> 
> 
> 
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Re: [Felvtalk] Hi, new member here

2011-11-01 Thread Christiane Biagi
They are gorgeous cats--very very lucky to have found you!  I've have my
Tucson, a 12 year old FELV+ cat who I've had since she was a kitten.  She
tested neg on Elissa when she was a couple of months old but then tested pos
4 years later though she'd never been outside.  My other cats who she lived
with for years all tested neg.  I got them vaccinated & everyone's OK.  I
had another pos, my Romeo, a wonderful stray that I brought in from the
street after feeding him outside for a couple of years.  He died last year
from lymphoma after having been inside for 6 years. Our best guess is that
he was around 9 or 10 years old.

Tucson is a bit of a porko & I don't push too hard on keeping her weight
down.  Her only "felv issues" have been a couple of bouts of very low white
blood cell count.  I spotted a problem when she wouldn't eat for more than a
day.  Vet used immune regulin injections & it seemed to bring her blood
levels back up.  She's had some dental issues as well but overall, is in
generally good health.  I feed all of them Wellness canned with a bit of dry
for late night snack.  I found by cutting back on the dry, it helped with
their weight--always an issue for lazy, pampered indoor cats! LOL  I give
her a B Vitamin Complex as supplement & they get cosequin as they get older.
I am quicker to take her to vet if she looks a bit peaked--she lets you know
if she doesn't feel well.  She's had urinary tract infection, tore out a
nail, got herself bitten when she really pushed one of the other cat's
buttons, and on and on.  

Though they each have their own dishes, they play let's swap all the time.
They share litter boxes, toys, etc. and groom each other.  Romeo was not
sick a day in his life until the week before he died.  The lymphoma was in
his chest & very fast acting.  Because of his overall health, I regret not
having realized that he had more than a simple URI & waited an extra couple
of days to take him to vet.  Wouldn't have made a difference but he was in a
lot of discomfort those last couple of days.  

-Original Message-
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Anne Myles
Sent: Tuesday, November 01, 2011 5:38 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] Hi, new member here

Hi, wanted to introduce myself and my cats.

I adopted two new adult kitties from a rural no-kill shelter in my area a
little over a month ago, after my 15-year-old cat passed away.  Little
orange Dublin and hunky white and tabby C.J. are both about two years old
males -- Dublin more of an estimate since he was found as an adult at a TNR
station covered in oil on St. Patrick's Day (C.J. was in rescue since he was
about five months old).  I adopted them both as being FeLV negative, though
I'd found out that Dublin had initially had a positive ELISA, then a
negative when he was retested after six weeks in quarantine.  The woman who
runs the rescue swore to me (as her vet told
her) that false negatives are common but false positives are not.  Well, so
much for that; I know better now.  I had them retested after three days at
my house, because I learned that Dublin had had ten teeth removed at a
dental a few days before he came home and my vet's office said that such bad
teeth at a young age was a common sign of FeLV.  And yup, Dublin's third
ELISA was a strong positive, as was a follow-up IFA.  C.J. tested negative,
and got his first Purevax vaccination that day, followed by the booster two
weeks later.

I agonized for a few days about sending Dublin back to the rescue, where
he'd go to a FeLV+ cat sanctuary, but he is such a special, amazingly sweet
cat (gives hugs and kisses, just amazingly social) and was so thrilled with
me and my home and is absolutely crazily besotted with my greyhound!  I
couldn't break his little heart.  So I've kept  him, and he and C.J. (also a
wonderful, loving boy) mix, since C.J. was already exposed to him at the
rescue (along with most of their other cats!!).  I am really heartened by
what I've read in the archives about how many of you have mixed cats without
the negative ones converting.  I manage to keep their food separate and
change their water and scoop their litter twice a day, but these guys play
and wrestle a lot, which is nervous-making.

Except for the bad teeth, Dublin seems really healthy.  He did have a bad
case of chin acne when he came, but it's healed up really well.  He eats
voraciously and has gained some weight, has a lovely silky coat, and is
becoming quite a rowdy little troublemaker too, always pouncing on C.J.'s
tail (he never played at the rescue).  It's not unreasonable to hope he
might have a few good years, is it (though I know there's no way to
predict)?

I've also seen mention of various supplements you give, and I wish someone
could 

Re: [Felvtalk] Hi, new member here

2011-11-01 Thread Beth Noren
Hi Anne,
Welcome to the group.  I love the pictures of Dublin with your
greyhound!   It's been a little while since I've had a positive, he
was infected as a young kitten, lived for 3.5 years (with his still
negative siblings) before he passed.  If your guy was a little older
when he was infected, he may have a better chance of living longer
than that.  A few people on this list have had positives that made it
to 8 years old or more.  The only supplements I used were daily
L-lysine (powdered, from iHerb), and interpheron alpha (part of the
time).  And when he was initially diagnosed because of a recurring
high fever, my vet put him on Clavamox and we left him on it for
several months.  This goes against the standard advice to avoid
long-term antibiotic use because it kills the good bacteria in the
gut.  He never had any digestive problems.  I think that the standard
7-10 antibiotic protocol is just not long enough for
immune-compromised kitties.
Anyway, you'll get lots of good advice from some of the more
experienced folks here.  Enjoy those two beautiful, lucky boys!

Beth (+angel Will Feral)

.
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 5:37 PM, Anne Myles  wrote:
> Hi, wanted to introduce myself and my cats.
>
> I adopted two new adult kitties from a rural no-kill shelter in my area a
> little over a month ago, after my 15-year-old cat passed away.  Little
> orange Dublin and hunky white and tabby C.J. are both about two years old
>

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[Felvtalk] Hi, new member here

2011-11-01 Thread Anne Myles

Hi, wanted to introduce myself and my cats.

I adopted two new adult kitties from a rural no-kill shelter in my area 
a little over a month ago, after my 15-year-old cat passed away.  Little 
orange Dublin and hunky white and tabby C.J. are both about two years 
old males -- Dublin more of an estimate since he was found as an adult 
at a TNR station covered in oil on St. Patrick's Day (C.J. was in rescue 
since he was about five months old).  I adopted them both as being FeLV 
negative, though I'd found out that Dublin had initially had a positive 
ELISA, then a negative when he was retested after six weeks in 
quarantine.  The woman who runs the rescue swore to me (as her vet told 
her) that false negatives are common but false positives are not.  Well, 
so much for that; I know better now.  I had them retested after three 
days at my house, because I learned that Dublin had had ten teeth 
removed at a dental a few days before he came home and my vet's office 
said that such bad teeth at a young age was a common sign of FeLV.  And 
yup, Dublin's third ELISA was a strong positive, as was a follow-up 
IFA.  C.J. tested negative, and got his first Purevax vaccination that 
day, followed by the booster two weeks later.


I agonized for a few days about sending Dublin back to the rescue, where 
he'd go to a FeLV+ cat sanctuary, but he is such a special, amazingly 
sweet cat (gives hugs and kisses, just amazingly social) and was so 
thrilled with me and my home and is absolutely crazily besotted with my 
greyhound!  I couldn't break his little heart.  So I've kept  him, and 
he and C.J. (also a wonderful, loving boy) mix, since C.J. was already 
exposed to him at the rescue (along with most of their other cats!!).  I 
am really heartened by what I've read in the archives about how many of 
you have mixed cats without the negative ones converting.  I manage to 
keep their food separate and change their water and scoop their litter 
twice a day, but these guys play and wrestle a lot, which is nervous-making.


Except for the bad teeth, Dublin seems really healthy.  He did have a 
bad case of chin acne when he came, but it's healed up really well.  He 
eats voraciously and has gained some weight, has a lovely silky coat, 
and is becoming quite a rowdy little troublemaker too, always pouncing 
on C.J.'s tail (he never played at the rescue).  It's not unreasonable 
to hope he might have a few good years, is it (though I know there's no 
way to predict)?


I've also seen mention of various supplements you give, and I wish 
someone could give me a lowdown on what you essentially recommend (that 
is reasonably affordable) and exactly how you dose it.


Lots of pictures of the cats here if you want to see them:  
http://s511.photobucket.com/albums/s357/PrairieProf/New%20cats/


Anne



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