| My work with FIP "terminal cases" (which
is when they are diagnosed) started relatively recently, my first
success being in early 2003. I'll present the principles I use which
I developed in my work with this illness, but first here's a little
background, to explain the situation to those not already "in
the know" about what FIP is really about, as understanding
the disease is key to repertorizing a matching remedy. I hope too
that what I learned may be useful to others not only in handling
FIP but with other comparable disease situations.
BACKGROUND
According to the Journal of Veterinary Medicine
2007 Nov-Dec issue, "There is no therapy with proven efficacy
to treat cats with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP)." In
this issue, page 1193, a German study presented is the latest (failed)
attempt to repeat the only known claimed success, in Japan in late
2003, when four older cats in a group of 12 cats with FIP, were
said to have survived the disease by use of prednisone and interferon.
The Japanese study was not formal, had no controls or protocols
and follow-up was indirect; the four survivor cats were not seen
but owners claimed they were still alive. The German study had 37
cats from various owners in a placebo controlled double-blind trial,
but not one FIP-infected cat (treated or control) survived more
than 2 months after diagnosis, whether using prednisone, interferon
or a combination. Hence the disease is still considered universally
fatal to cats. The standard procedure for a veterinarian diagnosing
FIP, is to suppress the immune system with high dose steroid (prednisone)
and to give antibiotics "to control secondary infection",
but even though this is a chronic disease, death can occur in just
days, especially with the most common effusive form of FIP in kittens,
called simply "wet FIP".
It will help to briefly outline what this illness is about, as
the name is a misnomer and understanding it is essential to appropriate
homeopathy. Then I'll discuss what experience has taught me with
more than 400 cases since Jan 2003. Included are before and after
photos to illustrate progress. It is my hope to encourage other
homeopaths not to give up on cats with this illness even though,
currently, successes are very hard-won.
Feline Infectious Peritonitis comes in three forms, none infectious,
and none peritonitis, and none of this is well understood by the
majority of vets either! The misnomer name harks from before 1998
when the true nature of the disease first became known. They got
the "Feline" part right - and thankfully this horrid illness
does not occur in any other species currently.
FIP is a unique disease in that it is triggered when a commonly
present gut corona virus in cats (FeCoV for "feline corona
virus") is forced by external stresses in the presence of an
imbalanced immune system, to undergo mutation to a much more dangerous
virus (FIPV for "feline infectious peritonitis virus"),
which in turn tricks the immune system into attacking and killing
the cat, this way:
* the cat's macrophages, which should normally engulf and overcome
any virus invader, are instead used as incubators for virus replication
- and
* the antibodies produced that should normally be used against
the virus, are instead used to attack and destroy the cat.
That's the disease in a nut shell, it is a chronic disease by its
autoimmune type but can kill very much faster than most autoimmune
diseases. It also presents with a huge variety of symptoms and thus
deserves deeper understanding to help with remedy selection issues,
and with nutrition issues - both equally important in FIP handling
as well as FIP prevention.
So I'll expand on that brief definition with suggestions on prevention
or management of illness at each step. I am concentrating here on
"wet FIP" as this is the trickiest to deal with, and the
fastest killer of the three types.
VIRUS INVOLVEMENT IN FIP:
The commonly present gut virus which is involved in supplying material
to mutate into the FIP virus (FIPV) in cats, is a feline enteric
corona virus (FeCoV) found in almost all cats. FeCoV usually is
not a health problem, though if present in high enough numbers in
the gut, it can cause gastroenteritis symptoms and can become a
potential stress factor for the cat. This virus can be transmitted
from cat to cat, but since it is ubiquitous anyway, that is not
an issue contrary to common allopathic belief.
However - if you add enough stress factors, you will see mutation
of FeCoV to the FIP virus and that is an altogether different issue
to deal with, though the FIP virus is not transmitted cat to cat
- each cat has to mutate their own FIP virus to get the disease,
and that requires many factors to be present. It's relevant here
as FIP is easy to prevent and it behooves the homeopath to make
sure anyone presenting a cat with FIP at least knows how to prevent
this devastating disease.
Food to control the FeCoV stress:
FeCoV spreads between cats and kittens via litter, grooming, contact,
etc., so is quite ubiquitous. In groups of cats where it is symptomatic
at all, it can be readily brought under control with diet. In addition
to a 34% or more animal protein diet, cats need a colony of appropriate
bifidus gut bacteria (not acidophilus) to make for them what we
humans get from fruit and vegetables (which cats cannot digest and
should not be fed). The bifidus in turn, need up to a teaspoon a
day each of pure rice bran and plain cooked pumpkin as fuel, and
no herbs or preservatives to kill the bacteria, and they will then
ensure the high protein diet is used to make butyrate, acetate and
propionate for a healthy gut that supports healthy organs. The bifidus
will also out-compete any excess of FeCoV present. This good nutritional
base controls FeCoV and improves general health but does not help
the potential for FIP mutation triggered by other factors. FeCoV
can be induced to mutate into the FIP virus even when present in
very small quantities. It only takes one. Hence prevention of FIP
requires a balanced immune system in addition to appropriate nutrition.
Prevention of Feline Infectious Peritonitis
External Stresses damage the immune system, a prerequisite to FIP.
I've put prevention up front as it helps with understanding of the
disease and hence with management of it, as one must remove maintaining
causes.
This catch-all phrase "external stresses" applies to
anything the cat's body or mind perceives as stressful. This includes:
* chemical stresses such as drugs, vaccinations, insecticides,
toxins in most commercial cat foods.
* emotional stresses such as weaning before 3 months old, change
of home, constantly being chased by another cat, being frightened
by air travel or vet procedures or un-gentle introduction to a houseful
of bigger cats or dogs.
* nutritional stresses such as food less than 34% animal protein
from good meat, fish, egg and liver, incomplete foods, foods containing
feline toxins such as alfalfa, garlic, yucca, rosemary and other
herbs.
* physical stresses such as being left out in severe weather, being
caged, undergoing surgery, being expected to digest fruit or vegetables,
getting a sudden change in diet, or having difficulty finding frequent
protein meals. (Cats break down body protein between meals if they
do not have several high protein meals a day)
* any other severe stress I may not have listed.
An analysis of over 400 cases of FIP that I have seen since early
2003, shows that the typical cat with FIP is a kitten who has had
three or more listed stressors, often a lot more than three, within
a short time, usually a month - or an older cat who has had long-term
stressors (perhaps nutritional, perhaps being bullied) with a more
recent trigger (perhaps a vaccination or inappropriate drugs such
as antibiotics for a suspected viral illness.)
The typical shelter kitten for example, has been early weaned,
changed home to the shelter, caged, given poor food, vaccinated,
given drugs for the vaccine reactions (assumed to be upper respiratory
infections), given anesthetic, spayed, "dewormed", injected
with a microchip, and re-homed again to a new owner who likely also
changes the diet, takes the kitten to a vet, and gets more multivalent
vaccinations and "a clean bill of health" or more antibiotics
- often all within a few days, and invariably within less than a
month. Kittens from a breeder are often no better off in terms
of serious stresses during a short period.
If there are enough stresses, the FeCoV WILL mutate to FIP virus
in the kitten or cat.
Without these (usually allopathy-induced) stresses, any number
of FeCoV will NOT mutate to FIP and there will be no FIP.
So management of these stresses is a sure-fire way to prevent FIP.
FIP INCUBATION TIME
From these stresses to FIP, it is a 7 to 15 day period to the first
phase symptoms of fever, weight loss and leucopenia (not currently
recognized by vets as FIP) and invariably assumed to be an "upper
respiratory virus" for which antibiotics are usually and inappropriately
prescribed. After this, the cat seems to recover as the fever goes,
the leucopenia goes and the weight usually returns. However it all
reverts and comes back worse than before. It takes an average of
36 days (but can stretch out three months or so) from the stresses
to diagnosed effusive form of FIP, called "wet FIP" ....
and it takes considerably longer for "dry FIP" or "neurological
FIP" to be diagnosed. Each form can affect cats at any age,
but "wet FIP" usually affects young kittens - often in
groups - due to the typical vaccination stresses, spaying and home
changes they all endure.
Thus vets currently fail to spot early FIP at all and indeed have
no test for it, and also currently fail to associate it with the
prior stress triggers. (Dr Diane Addie is an allopathic vet with
more than 16 yrs research in FIP and she is the exception who does
recognize the stress triggers.) FIP is thus only diagnosed as of
this writing, when the animal is essentially terminal. This is the
stage at which the vet advises euthanasia, offers steroid and antibiotic
suppression, and the client comes to a homeopath seeking a better
prognosis.
Until it is diagnosed at the early fever stage, FIP cases will
all be terminal and difficult for the homeopath to work with, and
many cases will be lost due to the lack of time and the speed of
the illness combined.
The symptoms are very variable due to the variation in susceptibility
of different organs in different individuals, and I strongly suggest
lab tests be used to determine what organs are affected, to assist
in remedy selection. The trigger list above (which is by no means
exhaustive, but gives an idea what to look for) is also extremely
variable and potentially relevant in finding the simillimum.
IMBALANCED IMMUNE SYSTEM - A FIP PREREQUISITE
Cats who get FIP, per my experience, ALL have an imbalanced immune
system, skewed in a specific direction, towards excess Th-2 helper
cell expression and away from Th-1 helper cell expression. They
should be in balance. Those who understand this can skip to the
next paragraph. I'll offer a brief explanation, with minimum terminology
here, including relevance to FIP disease management:
The immune system has a complex interacting system of chemicals
called "cytokines" which determine what kind of immune
defenses to produce if there is a problem to be handled. Th-1 cytokines
include things like interleukins and tumor necrosis factors, primarily
used in chronic disease and in engulfing invaders where they enter
and the Th-1 "base camp" for production is the thymus.
They make sure for example, that enough defensive cells via cytokine
"Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha" are produced to overcome
cancer cells, or that via cytokine "interleukin-2" enough
macrophages are made to engulf invading viruses (think pac-man activity).
This is the aspect of the immune system - the cellular defense and
chronic disease defense system - the "Th-1" side of things
- that needs to be in good health to overcome the FIP virus - or
to prevent it from being a possible disease. Sadly vets usually
give prednisone which skews the system even more away from Th-1
necessary activity.
If there are too few Th-1 cytokines to do the job they need to
do, called a "Th-2-skewed" immune system, then cytokines
like interferon with go-between capabilities, "tell" the
immune system that the Th-1 first defense system is overwhelmed
(when in fact it is only inactive due to damage), and the Th-2 system
will go into overdrive for a major war to try to compensate for
the huge battle it expects. But since there is not an overwhelming
number of invaders or viruses in a skewed system - it's just too
damaged to make the Th-1 cytokines or macrophages to deal with invaders
- the immune system misreads the problem and will end up making
too many antibodies. It does this via Th-2 cytokine messages to
the bone marrow where antibodies are made. FIP and other chronic
diseases that involve too many antibodies or that involve auto-antibodies
(antibodies against self as in FIP, also HIV and the feline version
FIV) all have this feature of a Th-2-skewed immune system. Allergies
and cancer for example, can also occur only in a Th-2 skewed system.
HOW AN IMMUNE SYSTEM BECOMES TH-2 SKEWED
Don't skip this part - it applies to anyone who does not want a
chronic disease!
If we can prevent Th-2 skewed immune systems, we have done the
major aspect and most important part of preventing all Th-2 skewed
diseases, FIP being one of them. In addition, if we can restore
balance to a skewed system, which I believe the successful homeopathic
simillimum will achieve, we go a long way towards restoring overall
health.
So what is it that skews the system and can we avoid it to prevent
chronic disease including FIP?
The first answer to this is that anything that damages the Thymus
gland, causes Th-2 skewing as it reduces this major organ responsible
for Th-1 cytokine management and production. The spleen is also
involved but the thymus is the major aspect and is routinely severely
damaged by modern medicine. Animal research shows for example that
a single injection of prednisone can remove 90% of thymus function,
and that vaccination of a pregnant animal damages not only her thymus
but that of all her unborn offspring in the womb.
Research shows that all vaccines damage the thymus. In cats, so
many vaccines are used, and they are started well before immune
system maturity at three months, that there is often no thymus left
to detect. A vet who has done multiple feline necropsies once told
me "There is no thymus to speak of in adult cats, it atrophies
after kittenhood." No it does not atrophy, that assumption
is due to the massive vaccination damage that is so universal in
cats.
Unvaccinated healthy cats have a normal thymus and good chronic
disease resistance. Vaccinated cats have little or no chronic disease
resistance, and every "annual vaccine" reduces the resistance
further.
In my opinion and experience there is no such thing as a needed
vaccine, and without them we had no FIP - it's a new feline disease.
Homeoprophylaxis is far superior in maintaining and building health
and resistance to both acute and chronic illnesses. As Hahnemann
explains in the Organon, a remedy given to healthy individuals,
increases their robustness and health. In the case of FIP, the remedy
I recommend most highly for FIP prophylaxis is FIP/FIV/FeLV 30C
which is a remedy made from organisms for all three autoimmune viral
diseases in cats. (FIV is the feline version of HIV, and FeLV is
Feline Leukaemia.) This remedy from a combination starter substance,
is a single remedy with wider "similar symptom activity"
than could be obtained using a single strain of a single virus as
the starter substance for remedy making. In my view, this wider
symptom coverage is one reason for the effectiveness to date, of
this remedy in preventing FIP and the other two illnesses). To
date I have very rarely been approached to address FIP cases at
the very early stages, and had no way to prove it was FIP, except
that the precursors were all there and the FIP/FIV/FeLV 30C remedy
restored health in days. With an advanced FIP case, there is no
point using this remedy except as future prophylaxis. It needs a
simillimum, supplements, nutrition and a lot of nursing, to rebuild
health.
THREEE FORMS OF FIP
Each type of FIP has different symptoms and will point you to very
different remedies. There is no genus epidemicus for FIP. This is
very important. Even the FIP in different regions may be a different
virus clade with different presenting symptoms, different virulence
or a different order of attack of organs. Then too, each constitutional
type of cat, will have different strengths and organ susceptibilities
and the FIP illness takes advantage of such susceptibilities.
I find that if one can determine the life-long constitutional type
of the cat - in addition to the simillimum main remedy for the total
disease condition seen - this constitutional-type remedy can be
given to the cat as an additional "crutch" to support
the cat during this illness. The intention of this is to bolster
its constitutionally susceptible organs, and to give it a little
extra edge in resisting the FIP damage, while the simillimum works
to restore health. It's like a crutch for a broken leg, it may heal
nothing directly, but it prevents some damage, and emotionally strengthens
the will of the cat, so as to assist the healing process directed
by a carefully matched simillimum remedy.
HOMEOPATHY FOR EACH TYPE OF FIP
"Effusive FIP" also called "wet FIP":
This is the FIP version most likely to be seen in kittens, who
are the most frequent victims of this illness. The homeopath has
no time to lose as the kitten can die within days of diagnosis despite
the fact this is really a chronic disease. While cases vary widely,
a typical kitten presents with a drooping huge fluid-filled abdomen,
a concave (drooping) back, dragging tail, unkempt "staring"
coat, backbone sticking up and with evident muscle wasting despite
the "fat" abdomen, either losing muscle despite a ravenous
appetite, or soon after that, with zero appetite, and is really
near starvation. There is often recurrent or persistent very high
fever. Clinically, tests will show clear, sticky, yellow, high-globulin-content
effusive fluid in the abdomen and/or thorax (where it restricts
lungs and breathing), and very high blood globulin and low albumin,
and may give you a picture of what organs have been damaged enough
already to be near or at failure.
Many homeopaths have written that they have tried Apis in effusive
FIP because of the abdominal swelling and high fever, but it has
not helped because the source of the fluid is leaking blood vessels
after auto-antibody attack, and so the real issue is "loss
of animal fluids" and starvation in presence of recurrent high
fever, as opposed to "hot inflammatory swelling" as would
suit Apis. It is very important to understand the nature of the
illness and know the specifics of the case to select the best remedy.
Remedies I have found effective vary widely - for example Cinchona
officinalis, Lycopodium clavatum, Baryta carb and many others -
and I cannot stress enough the importance of individual repertorizing
for each case. Do it well and carefully as the disease is unforgiving
time-wise, and you are likely to get one quick shot at it. Use all
the information you can gather so you do not end up feeling like
you have a distant dartboard and one dart with which to hit the
bullseye.
In older cats an even wider range of remedies has been needed than
in kittens with effusive FIP, and I do not find that surprising,
considering the triggers in older cats are less predictable, as
are organ health issues, hence there is less commonality than in
kittens who are mostly (but not always) ill due to a common set
of triggers as discussed above.
SUPPRESSED SECOND DISEASE
Effusive FIP also often follows another acute
disease and takes over and suppresses the acute disease. Look out
for this as you can lose a case that is coming right if you are
not ready to handle the underlying disease as soon as it emerges
in the weakened cat once you overcome the FIP. This is something
the homeopath needs to be acutely aware of - and sometimes taking
a good history will be an indicator of this. In this situation,
FIP presents as the only illness (as indeed Hahnemann also described
in the Organon when one dissimilar illness is stronger than another),
and the homeopath may work hard to build back health against FIP,
only to find that within mere hours of seeing positive results,
the suppressed disease emerges at its most virulent. The homeopath
can easily lose a case despite beating FIP, if they are not ready
for this event. (There is no time to order remedies after this happens;
make sure they are handy).
For example, a case I had of a tiny kitten called Annie, presented
as effusive FIP. The constitutional type of the kitten was Sulphur
and her simillimum for the FIP picture was Lycopodium. As these
two remedies follow well, they were alternated in her case, with
Sulph 200C once a day and more frequent use of Lyc 30C then Lyc
200C in accordance with symptoms, as needed. Her FIP symptoms were
typical for a shelter kitten as described above, and all resolved
over a few weeks. The day she started playing games and acting normal,
was one of rejoicing till that night she had a hacking cough that
racked and rattled her little body violently, and her owners feared
she would not survive the night, she was so bad. She had late-stage
Bordetella bronchiseptica, (abbrev BB) which is also usually fatal
in kittens under 6 months old. The sudden violent change in symptoms
was indeed a return of a suppressed weaker disease of BB. She'd
had a hacking cough - looking like an unsuccessful attempt to throw
up a hairball, and severe lethargy, before she got FIP. Bordetella
bronchiseptica 200C was used for the new illness, and it resolved
in a week. Since then Annie has become and remained a strong, healthy
cat.
DIAGNOSIS OF FIP
The homeopath often needs to spot FIP before a formal diagnosis
is made by a vet. It pays to be proactive when the symptoms fit,
and to initiate homeopathy as soon as possible, as well as high
protein assist feeding. The effusive form includes the feature of
fluid collecting in the abdominal and/or thoracic cavity, often
misdiagnosed and inappropriately treated as worms or overweight
till the cat's backbone is standing proud and the cat is near death.
The dry form has no such accumulation, but has the general symptoms
of muscle wasting and internal organ deterioration, and often uveitis
is present in one or both eyes.
The neurological form involves seizures, especially starting with
eye seizures (pendulum movement of pupils), a common symptom before
diagnosis is made.
The divisions for FIP types are relatively arbitrary. Which form
a cat has, depends on the cat's susceptibility (as indicated by
several factors) - and is a matter of what parts of the body are
destroyed first, and which parts of the immune system are damaged
and how much and in what order. All parts of the cat are attacked
in the course of the disease. Also any form can convert to any
other form during the course of this illness. This is something
else to be ready for - as there will be very little time to respond
when it happens, and again availability of a newly matched remedy
can be a problem for the client - and for the homeopath who needs
to drop everything and repertorize.... timing can be everything
in FIP.
So one is basically chasing a moving target of changing symptoms
to use in choosing the best current remedy, and the rate of deterioration
can be so fast that it is necessary to be very alert and on top
of each case and even to try to pre-empt changes if possible. By
this I mean, one gets a feeling for what damage is going to happen
in a particular cat, and it is beneficial to include that as a rubric
even BEFORE the symptom shows up. This can save an otherwise impossibly
late stage case, and is worth the risk that the symptom might not
develop. The risk in omitting the potential danger is higher than
the risk of including a symptom that is not there yet.
In FIP the pre-empting of a symptom is often the cause for rejoicing
later when the case resolves. It helps to educate the client in
what you are doing and why, and in close observation so they know
what to look for. Also use laboratory tests so as to be able to
predict which organs are weakest, and in what order they are most
likely to be attacked. It may be liver, kidney, pancreas, blood
vessels, bone marrow, nerves, muscles, etc, and the remedy selection
must coincide. It helps to pre-empt symptoms by using lab results
in FIP. For example if you see the lab report shows raised liver
enzymes, you know there is liver damage and you need to use a rubric
for liver inflammation even though there may be no inappetance,
constipation or other liver-related symptoms to see. This is an
essential strategy in FIP, as the disease can change much faster
than the homeopath can respond if one waits for symptoms.
FIP IS A STARVATION DISEASE
In all cases there is muscle wasting and starvation as an obvious
symptom as the body is attacked by its own immune system antibodies.
This makes nutrition and appropriate supplements, also key to success
in this illness. Muscle wasting needs a high protein diet from animal
protein - from real muscle-meat - of prey-size. Prey-size matters
as the amino acid ratios of the prey-size protein are closer to
those of the cat, and thus there are less digestive left-overs to
stress the kidneys. The liver is also damaged in all FIP cases sooner
or later, and it helps to feed liver, one way being to use the commercial
Hills a/d mixed 50/50 with hot water for palatability and for dehydration
prevention. This slurry is also a suitable base for other supplements
such as glutamine to slow muscle wasting, and Moducare to help balance
Th-1 cytokines, and antioxidant vitamins. It can be assist-fed in
small frequent meals. Look for anemia as it is common in FIP, include
in repertorizing and Pet-Tinic is the best anemia supplement I know.
Supplement selection depends on what organ systems need support.
Some cases have severe anemia, others pancreas damage, and the list
goes on. Find out what needs support and suggest supplements accordingly.
For example lecithin to help digest fats in presence of a bad pancreas.
Introduce any new food to a cat VERY gradually. That applies also
to unfamiliar supplements. Cat systems take a month to fully learn
a new digestion trick, so if you do not have that time, it may be
wise to use a cat-specific digestive enzyme supplement in the meantime.
A good one without feline toxins is Dr Goodpet Feline digestive
enzymes.
Look at each case individually to see not only what remedy fits
best, but what systems need what support.
"DRY FIP"
Here there is no effusion fluid, and this usually affects an adult
cat. Muscle wasting and lethargy might be all the client tells
you about at first, but look deeper. Repertorizing needs to take
into account the chronic nature of the disease, the muscle wasting,
the immune system damage features, the condition of internal organs,
the triggers for the specific case, the blood and other lab work
results, and the cat's response to the disease, especially emotional
response. For example, do they shun company they used to enjoy,
and what do they do all day compared with what they used to do.
"NEUROLOGICAL FIP"
This has need of an approach similar to that described for dry
FIP but with these extra notes. As you are dealing with nerves,
there is need for nerve nutritional support, with magnesium gluconate
or magnesium chloride - and Vit B6 as supplements for example, and
it is wise to assume that the cat will be exceptionally sensitive
to your homeopathic remedy. It has jumpy, damaged nerves already
after all. It can be helpful to use one or more dilution cups for
the remedy (diluting the aqueous remedy a teaspoon or even a drop,
to a cup of water, no succussion, and dosing drop-wise from there.)
Build up to the right dose rather than starting too high as neurological
FIP aggravations can invoke the most violent seizures. Be aware
that neurological FIP will often be worse at moon phases such as
full moon, (as will effusive FIP being fluid-related) so coach the
client in how to dose more often (in neurological FIP) or with larger
doses (in effusive FIP) at such times.
Be very alert to changes during neurological FIP. They can happen
faster than you can write an email. What starts as eye pendulum
seizures or a slight leg twitch, may become a 5 minute grand mal
seizure with no warning. Train your client to watch for abnormal
movements before they become seizures. Things like the cat walking
across a room, and stopping half-way for no apparent reason as if
frozen for a while, are worth noting, and consider a pre-emptive
increase in remedy dose to counter a worsening of neurological damage.
In FIP it is better in my opinion to risk a remedy aggravation than
a new stage of neurological damage due to hesitating to go up in
dosing amount, potency or frequency.
An interesting finding in neurological FIP that I have seen, is
that dosing frequency seems to be very critical. For example in
one case, dosing daily caused aggravation but dosing every 2 days
allowed seizures. Dosing twice one day and once the next made a
lot of improvement but only when dosing was even more closely fine-tuned
than that, did seizures completely cease, and healing start.
So the sensitivity of seizure cases such a neurological FIP, can
hardly be stressed enough. It affects remedy selection which must
be a great fit, remedy potency selection, remedy dilution and dose
size and remedy frequency. And of course adjustment for external
stresses including moon phases.
Finally, expect a neurological case to be a long
one. Nerve damage takes a lot of time to heal. Keep working on it,
do not assume that "nothing is happening" if things are
slow to respond. Look for gradual improvements. It may take up to
a year to resolve neurological FIP - where wet FIP can resolve in
as little as one month if no steroids were used.
BE AWARE THAT THE VET WHO DOES NOT UNDERSTAND FIP IS THE NORM!
SO YOU NEED TO UNDERSTAND IT INSTEAD
Your clients will not understand that even the name is a misnomer
- nor likely their vet. There are still vets so in fear of this
disease that they advise cattery owners to euthanize all their cats!
They do not understand how a cat gets FIP, or that it is not contagious.
So why the misnomer name? It helps save lives if the homeopath can
set the record straight.
The effusive form of the disease presents with a very swollen abdomen,
full of sticky, yellow fluid and was the first form discovered and
described in the early 1960s. The disease has struck fear into vets
and cat owners ever since. We discovered only in 1998 that the fluid
is leaked from blood vessels attacked by auto-antibodies. The peritoneal
cavity will show inflammation due to the high protein fluid but
it was previously assumed to be some kind of peritonitis infection,
hence the peritonitis part of the name. Cause and effect were confused.
The peritoneal wall is irritated by the leaked fluid, but there
is no peritoneal infection as was assumed before the 1998 research.
The disease also is most common in kittens, with many kittens in
the same crowded cattery or shelter often presenting with the disease,
hence the assumption was made that it is infectious, and that was
included in the name. We now know that it is the common triggers
for FIP in a cattery or shelter, especially vaccination protocols,
that cause multiple cases to occur in one location. It's not transmitted
cat to cat. Each cat has to mutate its own FIP virus from FeCoV
due to whatever vaccinations and cage stress etc it experiences.
Experimentally, FIP can be caused in a cat by injecting a live FIP
virus culture into the tissues, but that is not the same as being
exposed to some virus shedding of another cat. It is quite safe
to let a non-infected cat live with its sick friend if this is emotionally
beneficial to both. To put the client at ease, you can suggest use
of the prophylactic remedy FIP/FeLV/FIV 30C, aqueous, by all cats
including the sick one. This can be added to a water bowl separate
from the main water bowl. The cats will know when to take a dose
by drinking from the medicated bowl.
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS
There is confusion between FIP and FeCoV tests among vets. FIP
is currently "diagnosed" by several different tests, many
of which do not even look for FIP, but assume that presence of high
amount of "any corona virus" whether FeCoV or FIP or both
or some other corona virus, is indicator enough. Since this is no
indicator at all for FIP specifically, cats with FIP are often too
sick to help by the time they are diagnosed, or they have been pumped
full of steroid and antibiotic thus sadly making sure there is absolutely
no thymus for the homeopath to work with. It is most frustrating
for the homeopath, who is often too late to warn owners against
steroids.
There are two true FIP tests, based on a 7b protein fraction in
FIP that is not present in FeCoV. These are at least true FIP tests
and not "any corona" tests. There is an ELISA version
that looks for antibody to FIP's 7b protein, and this is a FIP screening
test developed in 1998 in USA, and exported to very few other countries.
There is also a PCR test that looks for actual 7B viral protein
(developed in 1994) and intended for necropsy work, though it can
be used on blood samples as well. It seems not all clades of FIP
have the 7b protein however, so FIP is under diagnosed in those
cases. If the 7b test is positive you have a 95% chance that it
is FIP.
FIP is more often under diagnosed with a true FIP test, than over
diagnosed. A FeCoV test "for corona virus" is about as
useful as measuring fleas on the next door dog for discovering FIP.
Here's the exception where you can get a positive FIP test in a
non-ill cat:
Cats exposed to other cats ill with FIP, can and do make antibodies
to FIP, though they do not get the disease. These few cats will
test FIP-positive to an ELISA-7b test (for about 6 months or so
after exposure in my experience), but they do not have FIP.
(They would however be negative to PCR-7b test looking for actual
virus protein.)
Depending where the homeopath is located, the FIP-7b tests may
be unavailable to the client's vet, as exporting a test requires
expense for certification in the foreign country, which has not
been done in many places. It is thus mainly a USA test.
After death, FIP is easier to confirm, as internally, tissues affected
by the disease become granulomatous.
Early stage FIP is not diagnosed (at time of writing in March 2008).
There is no test that shows it soon enough and except for the odd
research vet in the Netherlands for example, vets are not familiar
enough with the facts of FIP to even know when to suspect that what
they are seeing, is an early case of FIP.
Currently then, homeopaths are likely to see late stage cases only,
and I hope that what I have written here is useful information towards
helping these cats back to health, and towards helping their owners
to never see FIP in a cat again.
Prevention note:
Most owners of a cat with FIP, also have other cats, so be sure
that even if you cannot save the sick one, you save the rest and
any future cats. Be sure to spread the word on prevention, and the
stress list examples are also a large part of the answer to preventing
FIP: Just do not subject the kitten or cat to more than 1 or 2 major
stresses within a single month. For example, if the cat needs to
be spayed, do it at 6 months of age or later when it is a physical
stress only, and the kitten has had enough emotional experience
of life and gained enough maturity and self-confidence not to fear
for its life due to feeling sore from the procedure. Don't do it
just after the new cat arrives, when it is still undergoing home-change
stress. Avoid unnecessary stresses and spread out necessary stresses,
so the cat recovers from each before the next is due.
Just one more comment: I use the term "repertorize" for
the entire method of individually selecting a matching homeopathic
remedy for the presenting individual's illness symptoms, and it
is not meant to refer only to the use of a repertory, but to include
also the proper use of the materia medica as well, in finalizing
the remedy selection.
As of this writing, both Mantis on my website, and Annie in Oregon,
(two of the first to come right after FIP, in 2003) are both well
cats 5 years so far, after homeopathy for FIP. So far, none of the
cats who came right on homeopathy, has had any kind of relapse.
A few have had the off acute infection or other transient issue,
easily handled. Many cats recovered from FIP, but many cats did
not make it however, so this disease shows promise with homeopathy
but still needs a lot more work.
More about Mantis:
Mantis is the Sphynx cat who had FIP and whose copyright photos
I use with permission and thanks, as I present his case here and
my principles of approach using homeopathy. Here is Mantis, a skinny
kitty in Jan 2003 and with his activity slowed down from normal
and he is not yet showing the bloated abdomen of "wet"
FIP in this photo. He started to decline in health in late October
of 2002 and reached his worst point in Feb 2003. Most FIP kitties
have the disease for a while before diagnosis of FIP is made:
Mantis is a neutered male Sphynx cat. He appears hairless, but
has a peach fuzz type coat. He lives in New York. Almost a month
after the above photo was taken, Mantis started to swell up with
abdominal fluid. The vet saw him about 13 Feb 2003, but he made
no improvement and by the end of February vet visit he was in very
bad shape. His owner, Jesse, contacted me after reading my website
article on FIP. I received an email with the subject heading, "Help
I think my cat has FIP!". Jesse also sent blood work, and two
photos to show how Mantis looked mid-January as above, and how he
looked on the day Jesse first contacted me after coming home from
the vet visit on 27 Feb 2003:
This is Mantis in February 2003, a very ill cat indeed:
You can see that Mantis is really a starving cat, with bones showing
prominently. The bloated fluid-filled abdomen is deceptive. He has
lost muscle mass and the strength to jump well and has no energy.
He lies on the bed, not able to be a normal active cat.
His owner was able to acquire the food, nutrient supplements and
a remedy he asked me to repertorize and which he purchased within
a day of contacting me. He also declined the use of prednisone (a
steroid), and I believe these factors and his excellent nursing
(round the clock when necessary at first) made the difference in
a touch and go situation.
For today I wish to at least put the photos up on my website in
hopes that more people will see that even in a seriously ill cat,
it can be worthwhile to follow a homeopathic and nutritional approach
and success is possible. Homeopathy does not treat a disease, it
aims to build health, and if this is greatly successful, then any
disease that is present may not have a good enough foothold to stick
around in a healthy individual.
Every case is different and there is never a guarantee of success
in building health. However I feel that I have developed an approach
that gives better general health to severely ill cats with FIP type
symptoms (with or without diagnosis that being the preserve of a
licensed vet) than other approaches to support and nurse cats with
FIP type symptoms and I would like to share this approach with other
homeopaths in the hope that it may help more cats with FIP type
symptoms to get the home support they need. Every cat is different
and in homeopathy there is no standard approach but rather a very
individualized one to whatever situation the cat currently is in.
After homeopathic support for just over three weeks, Mantis has
recovered his muscle mass, his backbone is padded with muscle again
and his legs are strongly muscled, he has lost the volume of fluid
in his abdomen, and is rushing about and playing as a happy cat
again in March 2003:
At time of writing, (25 Mar 2003) Mantis is still on a regime to
build resistance and to balance his immune system for greater health,
and this will be tapered off in time.
Sept 2003 update: Mantis doing well.
May 2006 update: Mantis had a viral infection April 06, but is
now well again.
A follow-up article will be in a later edition of Hpathy, including
Mantis's actual case diary.
Photos of Mantis "before and after" and more details
are here:
http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/fipcase.html
MAIN SUCCESS FACTORS
Pre-empting symptoms, using the constitutional remedy as a crutch,
nutritional and supplement support, planning for suppressed disease
re-emerging, avoidance of all feline toxins, fast response to symptom
changes and educating the client on how to see when to dose - are
the key elements I use, along with VERY in depth repertorizing with
as much information as I can glean to get the remedy right first
try.
---------------------------------------------
Irene de Villiers, B.Sc AASCA MCSSA D.I.Hom/D.Vet.Hom.
P.O. Box 4703 Spokane WA 99220.
www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html
(Veterinary Homeopath.)
"Man who say it cannot be done should not interrupt one
doing it."
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