Hi Lorrie,

          What approximate age were they when tested? Just a single snap 
(Elisa) test? No confirmation? I have come to the conclusion that a negative 
subsequent to a positive result is pretty unreliable, because thru personal 
experience I have had cats that tested negative multiple times, and no 
possibility of exposure after that break positive. I'm going with the 2008 
information on the subject from DVM ( 
http://veterinarycalendar.dvm360.com/testing-kittens-felv-and-fiv-proceedings?id=&sk=&date=&%0A%09%09%09&pageID=2
 );

"Ideas on possible outcomes of infection with FeLV are currently undergoing 
re-evaluation. In the past, it was believed that about 1/3 of cats became 
persistently viremic and about 2/3 would clear infection. New research using 
PCR technologies suggests that most cats remain infected for life following 
exposure to FeLV. However, they may revert to a non-viremic state that is 
termed regressive infection. In regressive infections, there is no antigen 
present in the blood and virus cannot be cultured from blood. But FeLV proviral 
DNA can be detected in blood using PCR (Pepin, Tandon et al. 2007). The 
significance of PCR-positive but antigen-negative regressive infections is not 
yet clear. These cats are unlikely to shed infectious virus in saliva, but may 
transmit proviral DNA via blood transfusion if used as a blood donor. Prior to 
the advent of PCR technology, the term "latency" was used for antigen-negative 
cats where virus could not be cultured from blood, but could be cultur
 ed from bone marrow or other tissues. It now appears that "latency" is a phase 
through which cats pass during regressive infection."

            But, if they were not confirmed as kittens, there is a possibility 
that the results were false.


            And I'm with you. I don't re-test unless/until there's a reason to 
do so. Stress is the enemy...

HTH,

Margo

  
-----Original Message-----
>From: Lorrie <felineres...@frontier.com>
>Sent: May 28, 2015 5:05 PM
>To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
>Subject: [Felvtalk] Positive cats
>
>Has anyone in the group had a cat or cats who tested positive on a
>snap test 7 years ago (as kittens) and are still in apparent good
>health?  I have two ferals who tested positive and both are still
>doing fine. I have not had them retested due to their being feral 
>as I'm afraid the stress of a vet visit will affect their immune
>systems.  
>
>Lorrie
>
>
>
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>Felvtalk mailing list
>Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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