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With all your charges I do suppose you have to make plans just in case but hopefully his bloods will be clean. I really don't know about risk of infection etc. other than by a bite. |
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This might help you decide.... Once a cat has reacted positively to two virus isolation tests 12 weeks apart, he is certainly permanently infected. If he is healthy no treatment is necessary , but it has to be faced that 85% of positive cats will die within 5 years (as compared to 15% of the general cat population). For the rest of his life he will be a potential source of infection to other cats if he comes into intimate contact with them. Generally speaking, if anyone who owns a FeLV positive cat is thinking of acquiring another cat this should be tested for FeLV Virus Neutralising antibodies. If it has antibodies it is immune to leukaemia and it safe to mix it with a positive cat. The mere fact that the new cat has been vaccinated is not enough - it may be one of the 20% who fail to respond to the vaccine. But if circumstances arise when it is unavoidable for an owner in this position to take in another cat (as happens frequently in cat rescue situations), remember that the virus is actually very difficult to pass on to other adult cats. Simple precautions like separate feeding dishes and cleaning the litter tray out as soon as it has been used are sensible. If the infected cat is one of a multi-cat household, the others may either carry the virus or have Virus Neutralising antibodies, which means they are immune (this is very likely if they are all adults) or if they have no intimate contact with the infected cat, they may have neither. Remember, the highest risk of infection is to the kitten under 4 months. |
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