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Vaccinations
for Katz?
Friends Of Feral Felines is a
volunteer group of dedicated people with concern
for feral felines. Feral felines are domestic cats
that have been abandoned, or allowed to go wild.
FOFF prints a quarterly bulletin that contains a
huge amount of information about cats . . . both,
the tame in-house pet cat and wild out-door
variety, feral, ally cat. You are invited to view
the Friends Of Feral Felines website at http://www.friendsofferalfelines.org/fall%202002.pdf
The following article, about FELINE
VACCINATIONS, from the FOFF online news bulletin,
Fall 2002, is printed here with permission.
(Scroll down to reed about vaccinations)
The
article supports the recommendation and
vaccination program that is a regimen used by
KITNZLUV Fine Himalayan & Persian Kitnz &
Kats. We in-turn, support FOFF with an on-going
campaign to spay or neuter ALL Pet Quality Kitnz n
Katz, in an effort to reduce the numbers of
unwanted feral kats n kitnz that are either
neglected, abandoned at the side of the road, or
taken to animal shelters every year.
From: Friends Of Feral Felines <fffcharlotte@yahoo.com>
To: frank easy <easyfrank@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: Request Permission - http://www.friendsofferalfelines.org
Date: Thu, 6 Oct 2005 14:18:42 -0700 (PDT)
I'm sorry for the delay in responding to your email. Our
newsletter has gone through several volunteer
editors over the years, and I was trying to
reach out to our editor of that edition to
obtain a text file. I have attached the
document as a Microsoft Word file.
If you choose to reference the article or post in on our site in its
entirety, please be sure to provide a link to
our website in return - www.friendsofferalfelines.org
Thank you,
Michelle Nedopak, FFF volunteer
Understand
Current Feline Vaccination Guidelines
There
are currently vaccines available to immunize cats
against nine different diseases. In almost all
cases the recommendation of the vaccine maker is
to revaccinate cats every year. The question
facing the veterinary profession now is: Do we
follow the vaccine maker's advice and recommend to
all our clients that we vaccinate their cats for
all these diseases year in and year out?
In
order to decide which and how many vaccines to
recommend, the following four questions must be
considered:
1.)
Are the vaccines we use always completely
safe?
The answer is,
without question, NO!
It is possible to
have allergic reactions to vaccines and the most
severe form of allergy, anaphylactic shock, can be
fatal.
In recent years, it has also been
learned that certain vaccines in rare
occasions can cause a highly malignant
cancer (fibro sarcoma) to develop at the
injection site.
Both these tragic consequences are
rare, but they do occur. In my 25 years of
practice I have seen two cats die of vaccine
related anaphylactic shock and have dealt with
several vaccine associated fibro sarcomas. The
reason for using vaccine is to prevent life
threatening diseases and no one in our profession
believes we should stop vaccinations altogether
but we clearly need to assess benefit against
risk.
2.)
Is every cat at risk of being exposed to
each of the diseases for which we can vaccinate?
Again the answer is clearly, NO!
Some of these diseases can only be
transmitted by direct contact with an infected cat
so cats that live entirely alone indoors may
be at no risk at all for some of these
diseases. Vaccination would be unnecessary if
there is no risk of exposure. In order to asses
what your cat's risk factors are, your
veterinarian should be asking questions with
respect to whether your cat stays entirely indoors
or is allowed outside, whether there are other
pets in the household and whether your cat ever
leaves the home to travel or is taken to boarding
kennels, grooming parlors or cat shows.
3.)
Are all these diseases serious enough that
we need to vaccinate against them?
Once again, NO!
Some of these diseases are fatal, some
very serious and some (e.g. chlamydia and
ringworm) are very mild and treatable disorders.
For that reason it is probably not necessary to
use every vaccine available.
4.)
How long does the protection from these
vaccines last? If a person can get a single dose
of smallpox vaccine and be immune for life or a
tetanus shot and be immune for 10 years, why can't
the veterinary companies make vaccines that last
longer than one year?
The answer is, they do.
They are just not telling you. To get a
vaccine on the market the drug companies have to
prove that it works, but they are under no
obligation to do what are called "duration of
immunity studies." So vaccine makers can
arbitrarily label a vaccine to be re-administered
every year without ever testing at two or three or
five years to see if more vaccine is really
needed. Currently some of the veterinary colleges
are testing vaccines for duration of immunity and
are finding that some of the vaccines labeled for
annual use do last as long as three years. So it
may be appropriate for veterinarians to recommend
less frequent vaccination in spite of the vaccine
labeling.
In
order to address these issues an Advisory Panel on
Feline Vaccines was formed through the American
Association of Feline Practitioners (AAFP) and the
Academy of Feline Medicine (AFM). This panel
consisted of several practicing veterinarians,
representatives of two vaccine companies and
professors from two veterinary colleges. The
panel's goal was to make recommendations to
practicing veterinarians regarding their feline
vaccination program. In 1997 the panel published
its guidelines in the form of a 25-page booklet
that went to members of the AAFP and AFM. In 1998
a summary of the guidelines was published in the
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical
Association and other veterinary journals so that
all veterinarians would have an opportunity to
read it. These guidelines, which I will attempt to
summarize, vary considerably from what has been
the convention in most veterinary practices. Since
I am a member of the AAFP and a fellow of the AFM,
I support and follow the recommendations of my
colleagues on the panel, but many veterinarians do
not. Some veterinarians are as yet unfamiliar with
the guidelines and others disagree with them.
The
guidelines divide the vaccines into CORE and
NON-CORE.
The
CORE vaccines are for rabies, panleucopenia
(feline distemper), rhinotracheitis (feline
herpes) and calici virus. The panel
feels all cats should be vaccinated for these four
diseases.
The
NON-CORE vaccines are for feline leukemia virus
(FeLV), feline infectious peritonitis (FIP),
chlamydia, dermatophytosis (ringworm), and a new
vaccine on the market this year for bordatella.
The panel says "The decision to vaccinate a
cat with a vaccine that is NON-CORE should be
based on the realistic evaluation of all the risk
factors, as well as vaccine efficacy and
safety."
The
panel addressed the issue of how frequently to
administer vaccines.
For the four CORE diseases, the panel
recommends that in the first year of life all cats
receive a one-year rabies vaccine and two doses of
FVRC-P vaccine (a combination of distemper
rhinotracheitis and calici virus). The
next year when boosters come due the panel
recommends giving boosters which
are then regarded as three year vaccines. In
the case of rabies this would be a vaccine labeled
for every three-year administration, but in the
case of FVRC-P it would be a vaccine currently
labeled for annual use, but given every third
year. This is the point that has many
veterinarians questioning the panel's
recommendation. Veterinarians agree that for the
prevention and early detection of disease it is
important that cats have an annual check up which
includes a thorough medical history and a complete
physical exam, and in some cases diagnostic tests.
The concern is that the annual FVRC-P
vaccine has been the inducement for cat owners to
bring their cats in each year and if the
vaccine is given every three years, many cats’
medical care will be neglected in the two
in-between years.
The
panel recommends that you follow label directions
for annual use on the NON-CORE vaccines IF they
are used. However, the panel is not recommending
the use of FeLV, FIP and chlamydia vaccine for
indoor cats since they are not at "realistic
risk" of exposure. On this point the panel
may again be at odds with many veterinarians who
do recommend some of the NON-CORE vaccines for all
cats.
Another
recommendation from the panel has to do with the
standardization of the location of the injection
site for injectable vaccines. This is an excellent
recommendation, which sadly many veterinarians are
still not following. A vaccine made to be injected
subcutaneously (under the skin), will work equally
well no matter where on the body it is given. So
the panel recommends the FVRC-P always be given on
the right front leg, the rabies always be given on
the right rear leg, and the FeLV always be given
on the left rear leg. One reason for this protocol
is in order to assess which vaccines are creating
problems such as the development of cancers (fibrosarcomas).
Compiling this data will be impossible if
veterinarians continue to give multiple injections
at the same site or fail to record the sites or
give vaccines in the muscle rather than under the
skin where a developing growth is more readily
detected. The reason for recommending that
vaccines be given on the limbs also has to do with
the development of fibrosarcomas. These cancers,
when they occur, are very aggressive and efforts
to surgically remove the cancer alone are usually
unsuccessful. If the cancer develops on an
extremity it leaves the surgical option of
amputation of the limb. This may seem like an
extreme measure but in my own practice is has
proved life-saving for one now healthy, happy,
three legged cat.
Because
of the problems I have mentioned with injectable
vaccines, the panel also encourages veterinarians
to consider the use of alternative-route vaccines.
There are currently no vaccines for cats
which can be given orally but there are
several intranasal vaccines which are administered
as nose drops. You may be hearing more
about such vaccines or other alternatives to
injectable vaccines as time goes by.
It
is my belief that the new feline vaccination
guidelines are excellent and long over due. As
more veterinarians become familiar with and begin
to follow them, we as a profession, will better
serve the true needs of our feline patients. You
may find that when you visit your veterinarian
that they may be recommending a different
vaccination protocol than the panel has. If you
find that your veterinarians is recommending
multiple vaccinations every year for indoor cats,
or is giving the injections over the shoulders
rather than on the limbs, or is not recording
injection locations in the record, I think it is
fair to ask if they are familiar with the AAFP
Feline Vaccination guidelines. The AAFP is
making copies of the Feline Vaccination Guidelines
booklet available. They have asked that I make it
clear in this article that because the booklet is
a lengthy and technical document which is in
limited supply, it is available to veterinarians
ONLY. For a cost of $15.00 your veterinarian can
obtain a copy
Jerry
Williams, D.V.M.,
Cat
Clinic, St. Louis, Missouri
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