For All Those Just About Managing To Pay...
News1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by felinechums. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There's lots of info on the internet about this. This is one reason I advocate keeping cats indoors, not sure if your young cats were outside or if they contracted this from their mother, but please don't let them out now if they were outside, it is contagious, if they got it from a cat outside there is a cat out there that's going to infect others somewhere roaming around.
Becky Lundgren, DVM
Feline leukemia virus, a retrovirus, is a common infection of cats. It is the cause of more cat deaths, directly or indirectly, than any other organism and is widespread in the cat population.
Disease Transmission
Feline leukemia virus infection (FeLV) can be transmitted several ways:
a. by the saliva of infected cats contaminating the eye, mouth, and nose membranes of non-infected cats via licking.
b. by passing infected blood to non-infected cats.
c. from mother to fetuses (developing kittens) during pregnancy.
Disease
Most infected cats eliminate the virus and become immune. In those cats that do not develop immunity, the virus spreads to the bone marrow.
Proliferative and degenerative diseases may occur in any of the tissues invaded by the virus, or the virus may be indirectly responsible for other illnesses because of its immunosuppressive effect. A large percentage of the cats that are exposed to the virus will have latent (hidden) infections and will be capable of transmitting the disease in saliva, tears, and urine. Some of these latent carriers will become clinically ill when stressed.
Diagnostic Tests
Necessary diagnostic tests may include blood chemistry, hematology, radiography, bone marrow aspiration, ophthalmoscopy, and specialized antibody tests.
(to be continued)
Prognosis
Eighty-five percent of cats with FeLV infection die within 3 years of the diagnosis.
Notes:
Retroviruses are unstable, live for only minutes outside the cat's body, and are readily destroyed by most disinfectants.
Because the feline leukemia virus is so unstable, a new, healthy cat can be brought safely into a "contaminated" house within days of the departure of a FeLV infected cat.
Date Published: 7/12/2003
Hope this helped..Good Luck
there is more info at the Cornell University website:
http://www.vet.cornell.edu/fhc/resources/brochure/felv.html
or if this won't open go to http://web.vet.cornell.edu/public/fhc/felv.html and go to "cat owners resourses" then "feline Health information"
then click on "client info brochures" scroll down to "infectious diseases" and you'll see feline Leukemia and take a gander at it.