Marsha

If you saw my previous (and first post) you'll probably think I am a one-trick 
pony, but in your circumstances, you have little to lose and I am going to 
suggest again that you might try using Winstrol on Harley and possibly with 
Brock as well. I have used Winstrol (Stanozolol) in very dire situations with 
several cats, and always managed to get at least some benefit from it. With a 
17 year old cat who had a nasal adenocarcinoma, with an infection, I got some 
reduction in the swelling of the tumour, increased appetite and less malaise. 
She lived another 2 years after the diagnosis was made, even though she was 
terribly fragile, even at the time of the cancer diagnosis.

With a second cat - less than a year old - who came from a feral colony where I 
later learned many of the other kittens died at just a few weeks old and 
several of the older cats were diagnosed with FIP - I was sure my new adoptee 
also had FIP. She was quite seriously ill for two weeks with a very elevated 
temperature, runny nose, eyes, etc., no appetite, and I could feel a very hard 
tummy and hear serious wheezing. My vet confirmed she had fluid surrounding her 
lungs (not in the lungs), which was possibly the wet form of the disease. 
Again, with little to lose, I put her on the Winstrol and she recovered very 
well, with the fluid around her lungs reducing significantly. There is nothing 
wrong with her now, except continued wheezing and I plan to place her back on 
the Winstrol for a month to see if there is a reduction in the wheezing. 

Obviously, the decision to try this stuff will be yours to make and there may 
well be significant risks to your cats because of everything else that is going 
on, especially Brock with his heart issues. I am not a vet, but I have looked 
after more than 300 strays and I routinely take the ones that others say have 
no hope. Sometimes I can make a difference. Sometimes I can't. I am lucky in 
having a vet (and before that, another vet) who both had confidence in my 
abilities with my animals and are prepared to allow me to try things that are 
not necessarily conventional when faced with a cat that has no prospect of 
recovery.

No matter what you choose to do, I wish you every luck and my heart simply 
aches for what you and your babies are going through. I can totally relate.

Amani

-----Original Message-----
From: Felvtalk [mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Marsha
Sent: April-28-15 11:48 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] Update on Harley & Brock

Harley has been with me 4.5 years, since he was a kitten of almost 4 months 
old, FeLV+ since then.  Brock was adopted as a companion for Harley 7 months 
ago, after Harley's FeLV+ buddy Milkdud died last May.

Harley was diagnosed with cancer in the middle ear & jaw area in March, and he 
had one palliative radiation treatment at the end of March.  He was supposed to 
get his 2nd treatment a few days later, and the tumor had grown just enough 
that he could not be intubated. No anesthesia = no radiation treatment.  The 
tumor is causing some pressure behind his right eye, and is pressing on the 
inner ear also, causing balance issues sometimes.  He gets meloxicam and 
buprenorphine (extended release) every
3 days, and this keeps him comfortable enough to eat (soft food & liquid), 
groom a little, roll over for belly rubs, and once in a while bat a toy, 
scratch on his Turbo Scratcher with the light-up ball, or rub his nose on a 
catnip toy.

Brock gave me a shock.  I took him in for a voracious appetite without gaining 
weight, and itchiness around the head and neck, thinking maybe hyperthyroidism. 
 Blood work showed potential kidney issue, urinalysis the same, high blood 
pressure.  An ultrasound was scheduled to look at the kidneys, and everybody 
was surprise to find he had free fluid in his abdominal area.  110 cc of chyle 
was drawn off, needle aspirations taken of kidney and liver.  Almost certainly 
lymphoma, they thought.  Cytology came back negative for that, and he went to 
see a cardiologist and get an echocardiogram.  Final diagnosis:  restrictive 
cardiomyopathy with congestive heart failure.  He is only 4-5 years old.  He 
does not look or act like anything is wrong, and the physical exam never 
suggested he had that pleural effusion in there.  Now he is on 4 heart meds, 
and a potassium supplement.  The pleural effusion is under control for now, but 
I've been told this kind of cardiomyopathy is the worst of 
 3 kinds.

Marsha, Harley, & Brock

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