I just heard from Lisa. She asked me to remove the name of the person that sent her that message. Oops, too late. I sent it off to you guys almost as soon as I read it! Lisa asked that if/when you forward it to anyone that you remove the name of the person that sent it to her.
Nina

MacKenzie, Kerry N. wrote:

Thanks Nina---is it possible you could also send us the original
question (from "Lisa")? I'd like to forward to my vet and anyone else I
think might be interested/benefit. (I am also extremely interested.)
Kerry

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of TenHouseCats
Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2005 3:03 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: Adult cat resistance to Felv


if she finds the link/cite, PLEASE let us know!

On 9/7/05, Nina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello Everyone,
I've been discussing resistance ratios of healthy adult cats to Felv
with the vet that monitors my IBD list.  She just sent this to me this
morning and knew you guys would be interested.
Nina

Lisa...this is a question that comes up quite frequently.
The natural resistance to FeLV infection in cats older than 4 to 6
months
is very well established among feline retrovirologist.  While
susceptibility to FIV remains constant throughout life, that simply is
not
the case with FeLV.  While it is NOT impossible to infect an adult
cat,
the inoculate of FeLV has to be really significant (or repeated) in
order
to infect.

This has been shown in virtually all FeLV vaccine Challenge studies
involving adult cats.  It is MOST difficult to assess efficacy of an
FeLV
vaccine when using adults as controls...because they just don't get
infected.  Schering Plough has turned this into a "3-year guarantee"
for
their FeLV vaccine (a VERY reactive adjuvanted vaccine).  This is a
'no-brainer'...obviously!  Fact is, ALL FeLV vaccines look good in the
long run because of this natural resistance.

This phenomenon is apparently related to T-cell maturity in the
individual
cat and the interaction of those lymphocytes with specific epitopes of
FeLV.

The updated Feline Vaccination Guidelines are being written now.  This
material will be included to more clearly point out this phenomenon.

I do have a copy of the original paper...it goes back a number of
years
now and was published in a virology journal...Richard Olsen (who
developed
the first FeLV vaccine for Norden Laboratories) and Jennifer Royjko
(sp?)
published the manuscript.  I don't have that paper with me...but will
try
to dig this out and send the ref if you're really interested in
getting
into that.

RBFord







Reply via email to