Question
When I adopted my current cats last year, the folks at the shelter asked me if I would consider adopting some of their Feline Immunodeficieny Virus (FIV)-positive cats since I did not have any other cats at the time. The adoption counselor and I briefly discussed what this would entail, but since I had just come off of 6+ years of treating complicated diseases of elder cats, I wasn't ready for that challenge at that time.
But the counselor, the brochure she gave me, and the time I spent with Google didn't give me a very thorough understanding of the issues. So, because this question could come up again in the future, I'd like to know what the practical issues are in caring for an FIV-positive cat. Is day-to-day life pretty much the same as for other cats until the cat gets older? If not, what's different? (Diet, medicines, more-frequent vet visits?) Once the disease starts producing effects on the cat's health, what does an owner need to do to keep the cat comfortable and as healthy as possible?
I realize that every cat is different; as much as possible I'm looking for what is typical and how much variation there is.
Answer
With the caveat that I don't have a huge amount of experience in this area:
- you can lose them very quickly: it seems to be almost random when they enter the end-stage of the disease. I've seen FIV-positive cats go from apparently healthy to dying within a week or two.
- they're much more susceptible to any other infections that might be around (obviously!), so you'd want to be more vigilant about keeping them inside, making sure their food and water is fresh, keeping the litter box clean, and keeping your home clean.
- You'll also want to take more care about keeping them away from non-FIV-positive cats: while it's possible for fixed FIV-positive cats to live in the same household as fixed non-FIV-positive cats, the risk of the disease getting passed on isn't negligible.
- One that I've heard about but never experienced - if the FIV-positive cat is female, do not allow her to foster kittens. Females (I've heard that this is true of spayed females, although I don't recall the reference offhand) can actually produce milk for foster kittens and pass on the disease this way.
Answered By - Kate Paulk