[Felvtalk] Quentin

Marlene Snowman tessie1965 at icloud.com
Fri Jun 8 11:40:33 CDT 2018


Amani, in reading this I now realize that I may not be doing enough for my 3 year old. I had understood that this protocol was for when signs/symptoms showed. I didn’t realize otherwise. From reading your post to JoAnne I should also be getting my vet to prescribe now the doxy ? My cat is 6.2 lbs. should I be combining that with some other parts of this protocol now and only going to the winstrol at a later date?

Any advice is appreciated....

Marlene 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 8, 2018, at 1:21 PM, Amani Oakley <aoakley at oakleylegal.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi JoAnne
>  
> If this was my kitten, I would not want to just wait it out to see what might transpire. I did that with my kitten, and it was a mistake.
>  
> My suggestion is that you start him on a long course (6 weeks) of Doxycycline. I don’t know the dosing for such a small kitten. My guess would be 25 mg daily. I don’t think you need to start right away – give him some time to eat, bulk, recover from the other things like worms, etc.
>  
> You might also want to start now finding out if your vet will agree to prescribe Winstrol if worst comes to worst. Not all vets have heard of Winstrol (Stanazalol) or are willing to obtain it. The combination I recommend, and had a very good response from, is:
>  
> Winstrol – 1 mg twice a day
>  
> Doxycycline – 1/5 to ¼ tablet (100 mg) twice a day
>  
> Prednisolone – ½ 5 mg tablet, twice a day
>  
>  
> Amani
>  
> From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-bounces at felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of JoAnne Kraun
> Sent: June-07-18 8:22 PM
> To: felvtalk at felineleukemia.org
> Subject: [Felvtalk] Quentin
>  
> I recently adopted a kitten from a rehoming site online.  He was born on March 20, he was a little over 8 weeks when I got him.  He was covered in fleas so I took him straight to the vet.  They said he also had tapeworms.  He was treated for fleas and tapeworms and received his first series of vaccines.  His weight was 2.1 lbs.  They tested him for FIV and FeLV.  About 10 minutes after I got home, they called me and told me he tested positive for FeLV, a faint positive.  I have been doing a lot of research and I have been told that a faint positive could just mean that the disease is starting and he will have a normal positive next time he is tested, and also that a faint positive is the same as a regular positive. He is not sick now.  He eats a lot.  I have been feeding him Orijen dry food and both Weruva and Wellness Core canned food.  He seems to be gaining weight.  He looks good and he is a very active and vocal kitten.  He is very affectionate and loves my Cavalier Spaniel, who he likes to snuggle with after he wears himself at night.
>  
> Because he was so young when he was diagnosed, everything I have read online indicates that he will probably only live for a few months to a year before he starts to get sick.  I have never had a cat with this disease.   Everything I find online indicates that most kittens will not be able to  clear the virus and will live 2-3 years if we are lucky.
>  
> I am wondering if there are some supplements I can get him started on now, before he starts to get sick.  Regardless of how long I have him, he will be loved and cared for.  He is already very spoiled.   I just can't even picture this little guy being sick.  He is such a good little cat.  I call him Q.  
>  
> I just lost my 17 year old Himalayan Persian to cancer a few months ago.  I haven't had a kitten for 17 years.  I have 3 dogs and thought that an adult cat may be too stressed around my big dogs.  The Cavalier is fine, but I also have 2 Akitas.  My other cat was fine with the Akitas.  She was not afraid of them at all.  Q does not seem to be afraid of them, either, and he lets them give him kisses.  I do separate Q from the Akitas when I am not around because one of the is very playful and I am afraid that she would try to play with Q.  The Akitas are over 100 lbs so he could get hurt so easily.  Q seems to be a very laid back kitten, he does not scare easily and purrs whenever he is around us.   
>  
> What can I expect?  Will he start getting sick in a few months?  Do they just quit eating or what happens?   I would like to think that Q will be one of the lucky ones that lives for over 10 years, but I know I need to be realistic.  I just want him to have the best quality of life that he can have with us.
>  
>  
>  
> JoAnne
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