Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-06 Thread catatonya
lol. i'm a teacher, and i'm always horrified when i see that i have made one of 
those kind of misteaks. lol. mistakes.
  t

MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  i'm a chat host; i read typo; i didn't even notice.

MC

On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 12:08 PM, catatonya wrote:
 I meant NO way to know. oops.

 catatonya wrote:

 There is really know way to know, but the older they get, the better their
 chances are. My positive is now 9 years old.
 t

 Sue Koren wrote:

 Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a
 certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become sick?
 Or could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how long
 they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some
 kind of sense)
 Sue

  MaryChristine wrote:

 =
 yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
 that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
 exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
 on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
 always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
 merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
 first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
 a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
 negative on an IFA.

 generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
 exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
 virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

 my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
 just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
 it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
 really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
 another, so there was no rush here to retest

 and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
 were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
 to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

 MC
 On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very
 kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura. Thank so much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well. Most of her fur is growing back (she had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly
 as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth). She seems to be settling in
 and
 loves her room with a view. I spend as much time with her as possible, and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well. My vet just had me bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again. Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive? Vet also retested the three
 cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she
 discovered
 Laura's status. Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.

 Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little update
 on my sweet girl.

 Best regards,

 Human Laura and furry Laura

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





 --

 Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
 Maybe That'll Make The Difference

 MaryChristine

 AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
 MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ICQ: 289856892

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





-- 

Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892

___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org

___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-06 Thread MaryChristine
well, it was the chat hosting that enabled me to read anything--but before i
got sick with fibromyalgia (on top of other things), i made my living as an
editor and proofreader--so these days when i can rarely type an entire
sentence without one major grammatical or spelling error, well, luckily i'm
too old to remember it very long

(why can't they invent keyboards that can spell? would solve all the
problems!)



On Fri, Jun 6, 2008 at 2:41 AM, catatonya [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 lol. i'm a teacher, and i'm always horrified when i see that i have made
 one of those kind of misteaks. lol. mistakes.
 t

 *MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED]* wrote:

 i'm a chat host; i read typo; i didn't even notice.

 MC

 On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 12:08 PM, catatonya wrote:
  I meant NO way to know. oops.
 
  catatonya wrote:
 
  There is really know way to know, but the older they get, the better
 their
  chances are. My positive is now 9 years old.
  t
 
  Sue Koren wrote:
 
  Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a
  certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become
 sick?
  Or could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how
 long
  they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some
  kind of sense)
  Sue
 
   MaryChristine wrote:
 
  =
  yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
  that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
  exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
  on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
  always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
  merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
  first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
  a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
  negative on an IFA.
 
  generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
  exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
  virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.
 
  my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
  just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
  it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
  really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
  another, so there was no rush here to retest
 
  and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
  were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
  to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.
 
  MC
  On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B wrote:
  A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very
  kindly
  posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura. Thank so
 much
  for the replies we got, we read them all.
 
  I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new
 name
  for her), she is doing very well. Most of her fur is growing back (she
 had
  bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly
  as
  much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth). She seems to be settling in
  and
  loves her room with a view. I spend as much time with her as possible,
 and
  my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack
 and
  some lovin.
 
  I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
  is quite thin, other than that she is doing well. My vet just had me
 bring
  her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again. Do cats
 ever
  test neg on an IFA after testing positive? Vet also retested the three
  cats
  in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she
  discovered
  Laura's status. Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.
 
  Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little
 update
  on my sweet girl.
 
  Best regards,
 
  Human Laura and furry Laura
 
  ___
  Felvtalk mailing list
  Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
 
 
 
 
 
  --
 
  Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
  Maybe That'll Make The Difference
 
  MaryChristine
 
  AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
  MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  ICQ: 289856892
 
  ___
  Felvtalk mailing list
  Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
 
 
  ___
  Felvtalk mailing list
  Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
 
  ___
  Felvtalk mailing list
  Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
 
 
  ___
  

Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-05 Thread Marylyn
Dixie has been with me three years now and is perfectly healthy.  She  
was a show-up (thrown away) at my Mom's for several months before that  
and was probably 2-3 years old when she showed up there (best guess  
but full grown and spayed).  There are no guarantees in life.  I knew  
that when I agreed to bring Dixie inside.  I haven't regretted one  
second of it.  She is marvelous, wonderfully intelligent, loving, and  
beautiful.
On Jun 4, 2008, at 9:15 PM, Laura Mostello wrote:

 I have had Duncan for a year now and he is fat, active and symptom- 
 free. Now Celery and Baby Girl have joined him. They are all healthy  
 and love each other's company. A vet tech said to me recently,  
 Enjoy your FeLV + cats while you have them, because they'll  
 probably be dead within a couple of years. Nice. I've been upset  
 about her comment since then, but with luck she'll be proven wrong.

 --- On Wed, 6/4/08, MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Hi again :)
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Date: Wednesday, June 4, 2008, 6:26 PM
 current wisdom is that positive cats can remain asymptomatic
 for
 years, until the virus is triggered. no one really knows,
 however,
 what it is that activates it. culprits high on the list are
 serious
 illnesses, but i know that at the sanctuary, we had
 positive who got
 very sick, were treated (often surgically) and recovered
 quite fine to
 go on for a number of years. stress is another thing
 suspected of
 awakening the virus, but how do you define that? the best
 we can do is
 the best we can do: give them as calm and safe and loving
 an
 environment as possible, feed them the best food that your
 own
 research tells you to (that varies because everyone has
 their own
 opinion, and last year before the pet-food recall, some
 people were
 accused of murdering their cats because they didn't
 feed them things
 that others thought they should--things that turned out, in
 some
 cases, to ACTUALLY kill, while the other foods did not); be
 extra
 vigilant about any health concerns or behavior changes, and
 have them
 attended to right away--and did i mention love them as long
 as you
 have them, because no matter how long that is, it won't
 ever be long
 enough.

 there are no guarantees for any of us--the healthiest cat
 or dog or
 human can drop dead tomorrow--to worry about it all the
 time
 accomplishes nothing, and probably creates a level of
 stress that the
 cats can pick up.

 there have been FeLVs in my life who have only had five
 months to
 share with me, and other whom i've known for
 years--it's the quality
 that matters.

 (and take lots of pictures--i get incredible joy from
 looking at the
 photos of the silly little furcritters that aren't
 wandering this
 earth anymore--and i just grin when i see their faces
 looking out at
 me, and remember how they graced my life.)

 MC

 On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 12:28 PM, Laurieskatz
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 YES. Squeaky tested positive at age 13 and lived to
 age 22, symptom free
 except for his final 3 weeks.
 Laurie

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
 Of Sue Koren
 Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 6:33 AM
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Subject: Re: Hi again :)

 Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive
 but not sick for a
 certain length of time, if the chances are that they
 will not become sick?
 Or could the sickness just come on them at any time
 regardless of how long
 they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I
 hope that made some
 kind of sense)
 Sue

  MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:

 =
 yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time
 has passed so
 that the virus can work itself out of the system. just
 as with initial
 exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120
 days, depending
 on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer,
 so i don't
 always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the
 current on-line
 merck manual, and i never thought to keep the
 reference back when i
 first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a
 case where it took
 a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to
 revert to
 negative on an IFA.

 generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since
 last possible
 exposure, i figure they're not gonna
 seroconvert--but until/if the
 virus gets activated, they're just positive, not
 sick.

 my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last
 summer solstice,
 just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed,
 so i'd say that
 it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay
 positive. but it didn't
 really matter, because it wasn't going to change
 anything one way or
 another, so there was no rush here to retest

 and for those who don't know, all my others are
 either vaccinated, or
 were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so
 she's no threat
 to anything other than my

Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-05 Thread Marylyn
If you have ocassion to see the vet tech again, you might mention that  
life has no guarantees and that we need to enjoy every second with  
those we love..they may drop dead of a heart attach, cancer,  
accidents,  be struck by lightening (yes, I know several people who  
have lost both 2-legged and 4-legged friends this way) etc.  Perhaps  
she will rethink either her beliefs or her hurtful wording.
On Jun 4, 2008, at 9:15 PM, Laura Mostello wrote:

 I have had Duncan for a year now and he is fat, active and symptom- 
 free. Now Celery and Baby Girl have joined him. They are all healthy  
 and love each other's company. A vet tech said to me recently,  
 Enjoy your FeLV + cats while you have them, because they'll  
 probably be dead within a couple of years. Nice. I've been upset  
 about her comment since then, but with luck she'll be proven wrong.

 --- On Wed, 6/4/08, MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Hi again :)
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Date: Wednesday, June 4, 2008, 6:26 PM
 current wisdom is that positive cats can remain asymptomatic
 for
 years, until the virus is triggered. no one really knows,
 however,
 what it is that activates it. culprits high on the list are
 serious
 illnesses, but i know that at the sanctuary, we had
 positive who got
 very sick, were treated (often surgically) and recovered
 quite fine to
 go on for a number of years. stress is another thing
 suspected of
 awakening the virus, but how do you define that? the best
 we can do is
 the best we can do: give them as calm and safe and loving
 an
 environment as possible, feed them the best food that your
 own
 research tells you to (that varies because everyone has
 their own
 opinion, and last year before the pet-food recall, some
 people were
 accused of murdering their cats because they didn't
 feed them things
 that others thought they should--things that turned out, in
 some
 cases, to ACTUALLY kill, while the other foods did not); be
 extra
 vigilant about any health concerns or behavior changes, and
 have them
 attended to right away--and did i mention love them as long
 as you
 have them, because no matter how long that is, it won't
 ever be long
 enough.

 there are no guarantees for any of us--the healthiest cat
 or dog or
 human can drop dead tomorrow--to worry about it all the
 time
 accomplishes nothing, and probably creates a level of
 stress that the
 cats can pick up.

 there have been FeLVs in my life who have only had five
 months to
 share with me, and other whom i've known for
 years--it's the quality
 that matters.

 (and take lots of pictures--i get incredible joy from
 looking at the
 photos of the silly little furcritters that aren't
 wandering this
 earth anymore--and i just grin when i see their faces
 looking out at
 me, and remember how they graced my life.)

 MC

 On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 12:28 PM, Laurieskatz
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 YES. Squeaky tested positive at age 13 and lived to
 age 22, symptom free
 except for his final 3 weeks.
 Laurie

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
 Of Sue Koren
 Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 6:33 AM
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Subject: Re: Hi again :)

 Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive
 but not sick for a
 certain length of time, if the chances are that they
 will not become sick?
 Or could the sickness just come on them at any time
 regardless of how long
 they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I
 hope that made some
 kind of sense)
 Sue

  MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:

 =
 yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time
 has passed so
 that the virus can work itself out of the system. just
 as with initial
 exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120
 days, depending
 on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer,
 so i don't
 always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the
 current on-line
 merck manual, and i never thought to keep the
 reference back when i
 first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a
 case where it took
 a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to
 revert to
 negative on an IFA.

 generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since
 last possible
 exposure, i figure they're not gonna
 seroconvert--but until/if the
 virus gets activated, they're just positive, not
 sick.

 my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last
 summer solstice,
 just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed,
 so i'd say that
 it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay
 positive. but it didn't
 really matter, because it wasn't going to change
 anything one way or
 another, so there was no rush here to retest

 and for those who don't know, all my others are
 either vaccinated, or
 were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so
 she's no threat
 to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after

Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-05 Thread MaryChristine
USUALLY people get it when you phrase it that way--but some just
don't. people would show up at the sanctuary saying they couldn't
possibly keep their FeLV because it was going to die.

so i guess that means we all have to give up loving anything that
lives, huh? since they'll all die, sooner or later what a sad,
boring life that would be--when it's so much easier to just love and
love and love--and velcro the cats to the walls when they're driving
you crazy. (yes, i'm kidding.)

MC



On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 3:19 AM, Marylyn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 If you have ocassion to see the vet tech again, you might mention that
 life has no guarantees and that we need to enjoy every second with
 those we love..they may drop dead of a heart attach, cancer,
 accidents,  be struck by lightening (yes, I know several people who
 have lost both 2-legged and 4-legged friends this way) etc.  Perhaps
 she will rethink either her beliefs or her hurtful wording.
 On Jun 4, 2008, at 9:15 PM, Laura Mostello wrote:

 I have had Duncan for a year now and he is fat, active and symptom-
 free. Now Celery and Baby Girl have joined him. They are all healthy
 and love each other's company. A vet tech said to me recently,
 Enjoy your FeLV + cats while you have them, because they'll
 probably be dead within a couple of years. Nice. I've been upset
 about her comment since then, but with luck she'll be proven wrong.

 --- On Wed, 6/4/08, MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Hi again :)
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Date: Wednesday, June 4, 2008, 6:26 PM
 current wisdom is that positive cats can remain asymptomatic
 for
 years, until the virus is triggered. no one really knows,
 however,
 what it is that activates it. culprits high on the list are
 serious
 illnesses, but i know that at the sanctuary, we had
 positive who got
 very sick, were treated (often surgically) and recovered
 quite fine to
 go on for a number of years. stress is another thing
 suspected of
 awakening the virus, but how do you define that? the best
 we can do is
 the best we can do: give them as calm and safe and loving
 an
 environment as possible, feed them the best food that your
 own
 research tells you to (that varies because everyone has
 their own
 opinion, and last year before the pet-food recall, some
 people were
 accused of murdering their cats because they didn't
 feed them things
 that others thought they should--things that turned out, in
 some
 cases, to ACTUALLY kill, while the other foods did not); be
 extra
 vigilant about any health concerns or behavior changes, and
 have them
 attended to right away--and did i mention love them as long
 as you
 have them, because no matter how long that is, it won't
 ever be long
 enough.

 there are no guarantees for any of us--the healthiest cat
 or dog or
 human can drop dead tomorrow--to worry about it all the
 time
 accomplishes nothing, and probably creates a level of
 stress that the
 cats can pick up.

 there have been FeLVs in my life who have only had five
 months to
 share with me, and other whom i've known for
 years--it's the quality
 that matters.

 (and take lots of pictures--i get incredible joy from
 looking at the
 photos of the silly little furcritters that aren't
 wandering this
 earth anymore--and i just grin when i see their faces
 looking out at
 me, and remember how they graced my life.)

 MC

 On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 12:28 PM, Laurieskatz
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 YES. Squeaky tested positive at age 13 and lived to
 age 22, symptom free
 except for his final 3 weeks.
 Laurie

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
 Of Sue Koren
 Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 6:33 AM
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Subject: Re: Hi again :)

 Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive
 but not sick for a
 certain length of time, if the chances are that they
 will not become sick?
 Or could the sickness just come on them at any time
 regardless of how long
 they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I
 hope that made some
 kind of sense)
 Sue

  MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:

 =
 yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time
 has passed so
 that the virus can work itself out of the system. just
 as with initial
 exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120
 days, depending
 on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer,
 so i don't
 always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the
 current on-line
 merck manual, and i never thought to keep the
 reference back when i
 first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a
 case where it took
 a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to
 revert to
 negative on an IFA.

 generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since
 last possible
 exposure, i figure they're not gonna
 seroconvert--but until/if the
 virus gets activated, they're just positive

Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-05 Thread catatonya
I meant NO way to know. oops.

catatonya [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:There is really know way to know, but 
the older they get, the better their chances are.  My positive is now 9 years 
old.
  t

Sue Koren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a 
certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become sick? Or 
could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how long they 
have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some kind of 
sense)
Sue

 MaryChristine wrote: 

=
yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
negative on an IFA.

generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
another, so there was no rush here to retest

and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

MC
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura. Thank so much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well. Most of her fur is growing back (she had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth). She seems to be settling in and
 loves her room with a view. I spend as much time with her as possible, and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well. My vet just had me bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again. Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive? Vet also retested the three cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she discovered
 Laura's status. Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.

 Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little update
 on my sweet girl.

 Best regards,

 Human Laura and furry Laura

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 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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-- 

Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892

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Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-05 Thread MaryChristine
i'm a chat host; i read typo; i didn't even notice.

MC

On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 12:08 PM, catatonya [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I meant NO way to know. oops.

 catatonya [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 There is really know way to know, but the older they get, the better their
 chances are.  My positive is now 9 years old.
 t

 Sue Koren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a
 certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become sick?
 Or could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how long
 they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some
 kind of sense)
 Sue

  MaryChristine wrote:

 =
 yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
 that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
 exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
 on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
 always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
 merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
 first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
 a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
 negative on an IFA.

 generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
 exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
 virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

 my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
 just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
 it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
 really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
 another, so there was no rush here to retest

 and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
 were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
 to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

 MC
 On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very
 kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura. Thank so much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well. Most of her fur is growing back (she had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly
 as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth). She seems to be settling in
 and
 loves her room with a view. I spend as much time with her as possible, and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well. My vet just had me bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again. Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive? Vet also retested the three
 cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she
 discovered
 Laura's status. Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.

 Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little update
 on my sweet girl.

 Best regards,

 Human Laura and furry Laura

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





 --

 Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
 Maybe That'll Make The Difference

 MaryChristine

 AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
 MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ICQ: 289856892

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


 ___
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 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


 ___
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 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





-- 

Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892

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Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-04 Thread MaryChristine
current wisdom is that positive cats can remain asymptomatic for
years, until the virus is triggered. no one really knows, however,
what it is that activates it. culprits high on the list are serious
illnesses, but i know that at the sanctuary, we had positive who got
very sick, were treated (often surgically) and recovered quite fine to
go on for a number of years. stress is another thing suspected of
awakening the virus, but how do you define that? the best we can do is
the best we can do: give them as calm and safe and loving an
environment as possible, feed them the best food that your own
research tells you to (that varies because everyone has their own
opinion, and last year before the pet-food recall, some people were
accused of murdering their cats because they didn't feed them things
that others thought they should--things that turned out, in some
cases, to ACTUALLY kill, while the other foods did not); be extra
vigilant about any health concerns or behavior changes, and have them
attended to right away--and did i mention love them as long as you
have them, because no matter how long that is, it won't ever be long
enough.

there are no guarantees for any of us--the healthiest cat or dog or
human can drop dead tomorrow--to worry about it all the time
accomplishes nothing, and probably creates a level of stress that the
cats can pick up.

there have been FeLVs in my life who have only had five months to
share with me, and other whom i've known for years--it's the quality
that matters.

(and take lots of pictures--i get incredible joy from looking at the
photos of the silly little furcritters that aren't wandering this
earth anymore--and i just grin when i see their faces looking out at
me, and remember how they graced my life.)

MC

On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 12:28 PM, Laurieskatz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 YES. Squeaky tested positive at age 13 and lived to age 22, symptom free
 except for his final 3 weeks.
 Laurie

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sue Koren
 Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 6:33 AM
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Subject: Re: Hi again :)

 Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a
 certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become sick?
 Or could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how long
 they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some
 kind of sense)
 Sue

  MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 =
 yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
 that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
 exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
 on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
 always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
 merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
 first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
 a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
 negative on an IFA.

 generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
 exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
 virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

 my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
 just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
 it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
 really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
 another, so there was no rush here to retest

 and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
 were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
 to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

 MC
 On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very
 kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura.  Thank so
 much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well.  Most of her fur is growing back (she
 had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly
 as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth).  She seems to be settling in
 and
 loves her room with a view.  I spend as much time with her as possible,
 and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well.  My vet just had me
 bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again.  Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive?  Vet also retested the three
 cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she
 discovered
 Laura's

Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-04 Thread catatonya
There is really know way to know, but the older they get, the better their 
chances are.  My positive is now 9 years old.
  t

Sue Koren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a 
certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become sick? Or 
could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how long they 
have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some kind of 
sense)
Sue

 MaryChristine wrote: 

=
yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
negative on an IFA.

generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
another, so there was no rush here to retest

and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

MC
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura. Thank so much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well. Most of her fur is growing back (she had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth). She seems to be settling in and
 loves her room with a view. I spend as much time with her as possible, and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well. My vet just had me bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again. Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive? Vet also retested the three cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she discovered
 Laura's status. Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.

 Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little update
 on my sweet girl.

 Best regards,

 Human Laura and furry Laura

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





-- 

Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892

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Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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___
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Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-03 Thread Sue Koren
Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a 
certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become sick?  Or 
could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how long they 
have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some kind of 
sense)
Sue

 MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 

=
yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
negative on an IFA.

generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
another, so there was no rush here to retest

and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

MC
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura.  Thank so much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well.  Most of her fur is growing back (she had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth).  She seems to be settling in and
 loves her room with a view.  I spend as much time with her as possible, and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well.  My vet just had me bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again.  Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive?  Vet also retested the three cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she discovered
 Laura's status.  Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.

 Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little update
 on my sweet girl.

 Best regards,

 Human Laura and furry Laura

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





-- 

Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892

___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


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RE: Hi again :)

2008-06-03 Thread Laurieskatz
YES. Squeaky tested positive at age 13 and lived to age 22, symptom free
except for his final 3 weeks.
Laurie

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sue Koren
Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 6:33 AM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: Hi again :)

Does anyone know if a positive cat who stays positive but not sick for a
certain length of time, if the chances are that they will not become sick?
Or could the sickness just come on them at any time regardless of how long
they have harbored the virus and remained healthy? (I hope that made some
kind of sense)
Sue

 MaryChristine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 

=
yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
negative on an IFA.

generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
another, so there was no rush here to retest

and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

MC
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very
kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura.  Thank so
much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well.  Most of her fur is growing back (she
had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly
as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth).  She seems to be settling in
and
 loves her room with a view.  I spend as much time with her as possible,
and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well.  My vet just had me
bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again.  Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive?  Vet also retested the three
cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she
discovered
 Laura's status.  Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.

 Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little update
 on my sweet girl.

 Best regards,

 Human Laura and furry Laura

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





-- 

Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892

___
Felvtalk mailing list
Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org


___
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Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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Re: Hi again :)

2008-06-02 Thread MaryChristine
yes, cats can retest negative on IFAs if enough time has passed so
that the virus can work itself out of the system. just as with initial
exposure, the time period given varies from 60 to 120 days, depending
on who/what you read--i go for the 120 days or longer, so i don't
always wonder.. tho it's not mentioned in the current on-line
merck manual, and i never thought to keep the reference back when i
first read it in 2003 or so, it used to refer to a case where it took
a cat seven or nine (my memory is going) for a cat to revert to
negative on an IFA.

generally, however, if 120 days or so has passed since last possible
exposure, i figure they're not gonna seroconvert--but until/if the
virus gets activated, they're just positive, not sick.

my little pastel calico, lorelei, who came to me last summer solstice,
just retested positive on the IFA when she was spayed, so i'd say that
it's pretty definite that she's gonna stay positive. but it didn't
really matter, because it wasn't going to change anything one way or
another, so there was no rush here to retest

and for those who don't know, all my others are either vaccinated, or
were inadvertently exposed almost eight years ago, so she's no threat
to anything other than my peace of mind--calico, after all.

MC
On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Laura B [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 A few weeks ago I joined this list but couldn't post, so Belinda very kindly
 posted an introduction for myself and my FeLV+ kitty, Laura.  Thank so much
 for the replies we got, we read them all.

 I wanted to send in a little update on Laura (still don't have a new name
 for her), she is doing very well.  Most of her fur is growing back (she had
 bald patches) and since being on the l-lysine she is not drooling nearly as
 much (she had herpes lesions in her mouth).  She seems to be settling in and
 loves her room with a view.  I spend as much time with her as possible, and
 my nieghbor (another cat person) comes over daily to give her a snack and
 some lovin.

 I think she has also put on a little weight, which is good because she
 is quite thin, other than that she is doing well.  My vet just had me bring
 her in and restest her, (IFA), she came back positive again.  Do cats ever
 test neg on an IFA after testing positive?  Vet also retested the three cats
 in her care that were positive on snap tests a month ago when she discovered
 Laura's status.  Out of the three only one retested pos on an IFA test.

 Anyway, just wanted to pop in and thank you all, also give a little update
 on my sweet girl.

 Best regards,

 Human Laura and furry Laura

 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org





-- 

Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892

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Felvtalk mailing list
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Re: Hi again and Question

2006-11-29 Thread catatonya
I'm sure you've got a lot of advice by now, but it sounds like maybe just a 
hairball.
   
  t

Marissa Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello everyone!  I'm so sorry I've been out of touch for so long!!!  I got 
behind in emails and never was able to get caught up...life has been so 
insane!!!
   
  I hate to even email when I haven't been able to read everyone's posts the 
last couple months.  I send my love and thoughts to any who have lost furbabies 
and positive thoughts and prayers to any sick kitties.
   
  Slinky was neutered about 3 weeks ago and everything went well.  They also 
retested him...and it was positive.  :(  I'm considering taking him to a 
holistic vet when I can afford it (which may be a while)...and also thinking 
about switching him to a raw diet as he doesn't seem terribly interested in his 
canned food lately.
   
  My question is about a couple things I've noticed lately.  About a week or so 
ago, I came home and found vomit at the top of the stairs into my apartment.  
At least I think it was vomit...it looked like his canned food only slightly 
more watery.  If I didn't know better, I'd have thought he dragged his dish 
over there and spilled it! lol  But he seemed fine the rest of the night and I 
haven't seen any problems since.
   
  Now tonight, I was lying in bed and heard a strange noise in the living 
room...which turned out to be Slinky having a sneezing fit.  He must've sneezed 
at least 20 times.  Then it seemed to go away.  But then a few minutes later I 
heard him hacking in the living room.  I went in there, and again, he seems to 
be fine now.  He has been acting a bit like 'psycho kitty lately...running 
around a lot, acting a bit ornery, and pouncing on me to wake me up at 6:30 
every morning.  But other than that he's been just fine.
   
  So far, in the last 15 minutes or so...no more sneezing or coughing.  But 
we'll see how he does through the night.  Should I be concerned?  Do I need to 
take him in tomorrow?  Or do you think he'll be okay and he just got into 
something or something? 
   
  Any thoughts or advice would be most appreciated.  I considered trying to 
take his temp, but I don't think he'd let me...though I'd obviously force him 
if it was really necessary.  Please send positive thoughts!
   
  Thanks...and thanks again for this great group...i'll try to stay more on top 
of the emails!
   
  Love to all of you and your babies.
   
  MJ

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Re: Hi again and Question

2006-11-25 Thread Marissa Johnson
Thanks everyone for your feedback and suggestions!  I appreciate it!
   
  I've had Slink on L-Lysine for a couple months now (twice a day in his food) 
along with Vitamin C and probiotics.  I also feed him Innova Evo and Wellness 
(only because he likes variety and gets bored and stops eating the Evo if 
that's all I give him).  I'm thinking I may swtich to raw in the near 
future...when I have enough money to get started.
   
  Thanks again!  He seems to be doing fine now.  The only thing I've noticed 
lately is that when he purrs he sounds congested (but his breathing is normal 
and he's not coughing).  So I don't know if that's just a weird purring thing 
or...?  Any ideas?
   
  Hope you and your babies are all doing well!
   
  MJ
   
  

Lance [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hi Marissa,

I don't think the vomit is a big deal, unless it's happening 
regularly. Ember ate too much of her food too fast a few weeks ago, 
and she barfed in a similar fashion to what you're describing. I 
haven't seen it happen since. Regarding the sneezing, the same thing 
went through my mind that went through Wendy's: Lysine. It's cheap 
and has a good reputation with colds/URIs in FeLV+ kitties... 
actually, kitties in general. I don't give Ember Lysine right now, 
but if she were to start sneezing, I'd do it in a heartbeat.

Regarding food, you might check out Innova EVO. It's supposedly the 
closest thing to feeding raw. Ember does pretty well with it. There 
are a few other brands with natural/organic ingredients that have 
more nutritional value than your average corn-based cat food. Felidae 
might be worth checking out, and I've also used Chicken Soup for the 
Cat Lover's Soul. It's more widely available here than most of the 
other good stuff.

I hope Slinky feels better soon.


Lance



 
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Re: Hi again and Question

2006-11-25 Thread TenHouseCats

sometimes the very rapid sneezing is the result of a one-time
breathing-in of something as simple as dust or some other fine
substance

MC
--
Spay  Neuter Your Neighbors!
Maybe That'll Make The Difference

MaryChristine

AIM / YAHOO: TenHouseCats
MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 289856892



Re: Hi again and Question

2006-11-24 Thread ETrent
MJ, I wish I knew what to tell you but I don't.  Hope Slinky will be ok - 
sounds good at least that he is running around and active.  As to life being 
insane...well...welcome to my world! LOL  Glad you are back. 

elizabeth



In a message dated 11/23/06 21:54:43 Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:
Hello everyone!  I'm so sorry I've been out of touch for so long!!!  I got 
behind in emails and never was able to get caught up...life has been so 
insane!!!

I hate to even email when I haven't been able to read everyone's posts the last 
couple months.  I send my love and thoughts to any who have lost furbabies and 
positive thoughts and prayers to any sick kitties.

Slinky was neutered about 3 weeks ago and everything went well.  They also 
retested him...and it was positive.  :(  I'm considering taking him to a 
holistic vet when I can afford it (which may be a while)...and also thinking 
about switching him to a raw diet as he doesn't seem terribly interested in his 
canned food lately.

My question is about a couple things I've noticed lately.  About a week or so 
ago, I came home and found vomit at the top of the stairs into my apartment.  
At least I think it was vomit...it looked like his canned food only slightly 
more watery.  If I didn't know better, I'd have thought he dragged his dish 
over there and spilled it! lol  But he seemed fine the rest of the night and I 
haven't seen any problems since.

Now tonight, I was lying in bed and heard a strange noise in the living 
room...which turned out to be Slinky having a sneezing fit.  He must've sneezed 
at least 20 times.  Then it seemed to go away.  But then a few minutes later I 
heard him hacking in the living room.  I went in there, and again, he seems to 
be fine now.  He has been acting a bit like 'psycho kitty lately...running 
around a lot, acting a bit ornery, and pouncing on me to wake me up at 6:30 
every morning.  But other than that he's been just fine.

So far, in the last 15 minutes or so...no more sneezing or coughing.  But we'll 
see how he does through the night.  Should I be concerned?  Do I need to take 
him in tomorrow?  Or do you think he'll be okay and he just got into something 
or something? 

Any thoughts or advice would be most appreciated.  I considered trying to take 
his temp, but I don't think he'd let me...though I'd obviously force him if it 
was really necessary.  Please send positive thoughts!

Thanks...and thanks again for this great group...i'll try to stay more on top 
of the emails!

Love to all of you and your babies.

MJ


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Re: Hi again and Question

2006-11-23 Thread wendy
Marissa,

I would wait and see how Slinky is doing in the
morning.  I have kitties that sneeze for no reason,
and they get hairballs that make them throw up,
neither of which would need a vet visit.  I would make
sure Slinky is on L-Lysine though to keep his immune
system boosted.  A cold in an FeLV+ kitty could turn
serious, so keep an eye on him tomorrow.  If there are
no vets available in your area on Saturday, and he's
sneezing in the morning, you might want to take him in
so that you aren't caught with a sick kitty all
weekend and no vet.

:)
Wendy


 

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