> Date: Thu, 12 May 1994 08:32:51 -0400 >
Subject: Vaccinations
> As far as feline distemper goes, while ferrets can contract this viru
s,
> it doesn't cause clinical disease in the ferret, hence, vaccination is not >
necessary.
>I have a question about this. Since ferrets can contract the virus, does that
>mean that they can in turn pass it along to cats (and other susceptible
>animals)? If so, would vaccination prevent this?
>Thanks!
>Nancy Hartman Internet - [log in to unmask] GEnie - n.hartman4
>President, Delaware Valley Ferret Club | CIS Grad Student, U. of Delaware
>*** Caregiver to Percy, Bree, Popcorn, & Scuttlebutt the ferrets ***
>"We can judge the heart of a man by his treatment of animals" - Kant
Nancy,
I have been asked this question before, and I don't have a good answer,
as no one's ever done a study on this. My feelings are that they could pass it
to unvaccinated cats. Passage through a ferret would most likely not inactivate
this virus. However, to vaccinate a ferret simply to prevent this occurrence
would most likely not be feasible. Inmfected ferrets would shed for a short
time, then get their own natural immunity. Iwould concentrate vaccination
efforts on the cats instead.
Bruce Williams, DVM Department of Veterinary Pathology
[log in to unmask] Armed Forces Institute of Pathology
(202) 576-2453/2454 Washington, D.C. 20306-6000
[Posted in FML issue 0830]
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