FIPV

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Thu May 15, 2008 1:29 pm

Just would like to inform many of the cat owners here on this forum that the final results are coming in on having a positive cure for most of the cat diseases in regards to a serum that was created. The results are being reviewed. Also in regards to the announcement by jnz, such will be checked out and I will let you know. The participation involved here is good and for me I am sort of glad that jnz pointed out something that was previously overlooked.

Will let you folks know shortly.

Daveyo
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby jnz on Thu May 15, 2008 7:15 pm

Apparently you are a scientist and I am praying that this serum will work. If you have such a thing that "cures most cat diseases", I doubt that the 40 year-old technology that I found will have much to offer. I guess that's the end of me thinking I'm a smart guy! Anyway, thank you for your work and may God bless you.
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Thu May 15, 2008 11:17 pm

To jnz

Don't give up your research buddy. Actually what is being discovered now was from the data 40 + years ago!!!!!!!!!! That is how we figured out the cure for Canine Distemper!!!!!!! Don't that beat all. Other people created serums and vaccines meant for something else yet unknown to them at the time that their discovery can be applied to the other diseases involving animals and also work and cures these diseases as well. So in reality we are backtracking to the past discoveries folks and tinkering it with the diseases known today in finding out what else it can be applied and be useful to stem the tide of so many diseases now popping up around the world.

In all honest truth we are running out of gas making new drugs and vaccines, yet today and the technology ongoing is yet the birth pangs of discovery's such as stem cells, genome cells, DNA profiles etc., still has a very long way to go to figure out the protein structures of how such works and does not work. Also lately cytokines seems to be doing the trick, but which ones, since for every animal and human it is a different cytokine yet it does the job of which we suspect it is all genetic related but why and how and which etc., has yet to be figured out because WE DO NOT HAVE THE KIND OF MONEY TO GET THESE ANSWERS, yet it works field wise!!!!!!!!!!!

Most researchers today are still in biology 101. They don't want to believe that somehow other means and other drugs from the past can possibly work even in humans that may have been meant for animals and vice versa for some other diseases that otherwise cannot save or cure and reached a dead end!!!!!

That is why they even tell me and also Dr. Sears we have to be practicing VOODOO, which we are not but merely working it in a medical way that can be applied safely both ways and use the resources that WAS MADE previously but never gone further than its intended uses and that such was figured out 40 + years ago.

So go figure. In any rate the past results is very difficult to get let alone most of those other people who did make such discovery took all the answers down to their graves, and their physical data is all but gone. So we have to dig very deep to extract what little is still out there today.

jnz, keep your research engine going please . We need all the help we can get from some people willing to donate some of their time in researching data and passing the word up that can be possible matches etc.

I pray and hope you can do this much for all concerned and anyone else willing to do the same.

Daveyo
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Sat May 17, 2008 4:25 am

Ok to cat owners of FIPV. You have some choices here which is a bit of rushed data.

We have serology from the serum that is 1/16,000 and a cat can survive for 5 years minimum 95
% cure rate

Also you can use Atabrin (which is a antimalarial drug) which gives a 75% cure rate.

Also anticlerical controls FIPV using quinine as as long as it is given the problem remains in control, and if you stop giving this, the disease comes back.

Right now we are working on the Dx to give to the cats and writing up a medical protocol for the cat owners having FIPV.

just doing what I can here. The cure rates depends on the cats genetics which variate.

Daveyo
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Re: FIPV correction of last post

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Sat May 17, 2008 4:32 am

In regards to the serology of 1/16,000 the cats will survive more than 5 years and longer since the titer count is extremely very high, and the cure rate depending on its genetics is 95%.

Daveyo
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby jnz on Sat May 17, 2008 2:59 pm

Daveyo,

75% cure rate for Atabrin is a fantastic breakthrough on its own. Would you explain the effect of Atabrin on FIPV? How does it work?

Regards,
jnz
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Sat May 17, 2008 4:36 pm

JNZ,

Ok I will do my best to make some explanations here once the load is reduced within a few days.

To be brief I will make a protocol Dx here with the explanation of what Atabrin will do and also of the serology will do (antibody serum).

There is a trifecta ongoing. We got 3 that stabilizes this disease, 2 of them definite cures and 1 of them the rating is not as high as the best being the antibody serum. Quinine- Atabrin - Serum. Serum being the best.

I will write this out in a few days. 3 AM here, and quite tired. Broken water pipe, broken magnifier base and so on, meetings, what a day. And its Saturday to say the least.

Stay alert.

Daveyo
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby jnz on Sat May 17, 2008 5:18 pm

I apologize, I was being pushy. It's just that it's such fantastic news!
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby Daveyo on Tue May 20, 2008 3:22 pm

OK JNZ

Here is the answers with the prescription to put this disease into remission thus saving the cats regarding this specific disease.

Atabrin is an antimalarial. Can buy this in any drug store. We used 50 mg in a capsule orally daily for one week then every other day for one week then twice weekly for l Mo. Most cats begin to look better in 48 hrs. Some (60 - 80%) get completely better. If the cat is severely compromised and dying, then nothing works.


According to field experience is that the disease can stop. The disease is usually in remission. It seems that the immune response to the disease is what causes death. Autopsies show> Causes clotting material to form in the vessels which then plug up and cause loss of action and leakage which causes fluid to fill body cavities. Very nasty disease.

Do not undercut the instructions as given here because this disease is nasty to cats.

However a lot of them can be saved and this disease is in remission. How long????? depends on the cat itself and the genetics. What you don't want is an immune response so technically this is like sneaking in the back door to avoid it. I have already explained it above.

Daveyo

PS I suggest you post a new topic here and inform the other cat owners and if you can try to spread the word around.

I am just very busy, time is limited jnz. Let me know when you do.
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Re: FIPV

Post a new topicby jnz on Tue May 20, 2008 3:55 pm

Daveyo,

One question. Am I correct that Atabrin, Atabrine, and Quinacrine are all the same drug?
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