[Felvtalk] another felv kitten - Brasil

Patricia Oliveira cinzaeamarelo at gmail.com
Fri Nov 15 17:55:04 CST 2019


Hi, Amani!

You know, i am using stanozolol with an elderly fiv cat rescued some weeks
ago. She was inside a box, in the street, and couldn´t even support her own
weight. Anemic, huge infeccion ( more than 40.000 leukocytes!).

Now she is walking almost normal, no more anemia, progressing day by day :)

I am very grateful for finding out stanozolol through this mailing list.

About Ferrero (felv kitten), i was hoping there was something that could
help him to eliminate virus. I didn´t think about felv treatment for now.

Maybe I'm being too optimistic? :(

This is Ferrero:
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-y_Q8LLhYoxk/Xc7_9WuIMeI/AAAAAAAAxVQ/9_B4ofolnSsC5E36Q41guTu-CoeRjbT3wCLcBGAsYHQ/s1600/IMG_20191115_130925.jpg

Thank you!

Patrícia


Em sex., 15 de nov. de 2019 às 17:32, Amani Oakley <aoakley at oakleylegal.com>
escreveu:

> Patricia – I speak just for myself, based on my experience with my FeLV
> kitten. I personally would not wait. If I ever had the chance to do it all
> again, I would have started my kitten on treatment for FeLV well before he
> had his crash, months after we learned he was FeLV positive.
>
>
>
> This virus is not just sitting quietly. It is doing damage, even if we
> can’t see immediately see it. The cat’s system compensates and compensates
> and compensates until a tipping point is reached and the cat has a
> catastrophic event. This is when we run to the vets, get blood work done
> which shows horrible results, and all sorts of heroic efforts (blood
> transfusions, experimental treatments, etc.) are then hysterically
> initiated. Many many times, it is too late, and no matter what we do, we
> can’t drag these tiny little angels back from the brink.
>
>
>
> In my cat’s case, even though I was able to drag him back from the abyss,
> the virus nonetheless had done a lot of damage to his body. He ended up
> dying at a very young 7 years of age. We loved him so much, and we got six
> more years with him, but it was nowhere near enough. He died, ultimately,
> from a terribly scarred heart. We don’t know for sure, of course, but it is
> likely that the virus was able to damage his heart, before we were able to
> defeat the virus, much damage had been done to his body.
>
>
>
> If it were me, I would start your kitten on
> Winstrol/Prednisone/Doxycycline even if there are no symptoms. I would not
> wait for the shoe to drop. I would not bet on the virus not causing a
> problem.
>
>
>
> Amani
>
>
>
> *From:* Felvtalk <felvtalk-bounces at felineleukemia.org> * On Behalf Of *Patricia
> Oliveira
> *Sent:* November 14, 2019 4:53 PM
> *To:* felvtalk at felineleukemia.org
> *Subject:* [Felvtalk] another felv kitten - Brasil
>
>
>
>
> Hello!
>
>
> Here I am again with another felv kitten rescued.
>
> Fortunately, this time it's not a sick kitten. We test all rescued kittens
> and this one tested positive for felv.
>
> I was searching archives but i didn´t find anything for asymptomatic
> kittens. Do you have any suggestions?
>
>
>
> He is about 5 or 6 months, was spayed some weeks ago, his weight is
> increasing, good coat, active and playing. He had a scratching neck injury
> but is already much better.
>
>
>
> Blood work showed eosinophilia (because of neck inflamed skin maybe?),
> everything else normal.
>
>
>
> We will test him again in few weeks. Any advice until then?
>
>
>
> Thank you very much!
>
>
>
>
>
> Patrícia
>
> Santos/SP/Brazil
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