It's coronavirus
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 12:57:00 -0400, "Phil P."
wrote:
"John Ross Mc Master" wrote in message
.. .
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 00:43:33 -0400, "Phil P."
wrote:
"John Ross Mc Master" wrote in message
.. .
It hit them all at once. It could become FIP which is fatal. I must
have tracked it in somehow.
Most cats are infected with FCoV at some point in their lives because it
spreads so easily. You don't even have to be near an infected cat to
tract
it in to your home. But I wouldn't worry about FIP if I were you.
First off- just because your cats are FCoV antibody-positive (I'm
assuming
your vet ran a ViraCHEK/CV for antibodies to FCoV), that doesn't mean
FCoV
is causing your cats' clinical signs. Millions of cats are FCoV
antibody-positive and completely asymptomatic. If you want to know if
your
cats have an active FCoV infection, you have to run paired antibody tests
and see if the titers are rising. A single test doesn't mean anything
more
than your cats were exposed to FCoV at some point in their lives. If you
got
one of your cats from a shelter or breeder the cat is most likely FCoV
positive and could have infected the others. But most FCoV infections are
subclinical and you would never know the cat was positive unless you
tested
for it. A "bad" FCoV infection causes enteritis - but that's about it in
the vast majority of cases.
How are they doing?
Phil
The girls are eating now and the older boys are being forcefed. One of
the boys had a bowel movement!
They were constipated? The primary clinical sign of FCoV infection is
diarrhea. I don't think FCoV is the problem.
Phil
They would not eat or drink for days. All are eating now except
Archie, and all are drinking except Archie. The stool sample found
coronavirus but I'm not sure what actually caused every cat in the
house to stop eating and drinking at the same time. No, it wasn't
poisoning.
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