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下面引用由kathy07012006/02/20 10:36am 發表的內容:
我想知道的是我該轉診到那�做檢查,台大嗎??

你的問題如果只是這樣的話,不妨配合診察醫師的建議即可.
至於轉診到哪裡, 則由你自己決定.
下面引用由sherryyeh422006/02/17 10:11pm 發表的內容:
謝謝你詳細的說明
不過這麼好的解說為什麼要用購買的啊
讓大家多些基本概念挺好的
如果不是請教了不同的醫生
...

我大概知道你要問什麼了.
你最後說的那種是目前骨科耗材最貴的...
不過運用在遠端骨折的確是好東西.
其實現在已經有民間業者提供rt-PCR檢測的服務, 費用也不會比台大貴, 可以跟自己的家庭獸醫洽詢.
如果經濟許可的話, 做手術會好的比較快, 也比較不會出現太多的骨痂.
下面引用由2006/02/16 01:00am 發表的內容:
沒錯
你遇到庸醫了
屑屑是白色的嗎?
若是白色的就是黴菌
...

不知道是誰這樣敎你的....很遺憾你錯的離譜........
如果這樣就能判斷, 那獸醫就可以不用混了...
我怪叔叔就可以消失在茫茫人海中了....
各位都太強了....
我就把2005年新版的ettinger獸醫內科聖經的原文摘錄出來提出來與大家共享.

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TREATMENT AND PREVENTION OF FELINE INFECTIOUS PERITONITIS
Virtually every cat with confirmed FIP dies. Some veteri- narians prescribe immunomodulators (Propionobacterium acnes (immunoregulin), interferon, acemannan) to treat cats with FIP with no documented, controlled evidence of efficacy. Immunosuppressive drugs such as prednisone (4 mg/kg, orally once a day) or cyclophosphamide (2 to 4 mg/kg, orally four times a week) may slow disease progression but do not produce a cure. Cats with FIP should also be treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics and supportive therapy (subcutaneous fluids, rest, good nutrition, lack of stress) for as long as they are comfortable. Once disease signs become debilitating and weight and appetite decline, the owner must be prepared for the reality that their cat is dying.
Unfortunately, preventing FIP is extremely difficult. Three prevention targets will be discussed: (1) preventing FIP in cats that were in contact with cats with FIP, (2) preventing FIP in cats harboring FECV, and (3) preventing FECV. After a cat in a household develops FIP, one can do virtually nothing to prevent FIP in other in-contact cats. All cats will have already been exposed to the same coronaviruses, although this is usually an FECV. Few healthy cats in the household will develop FIP, although the stress of being locked in a bathroom in the misguided attempt to prevent exposure would not help remaining cats fight infection. After a diagnosis of FIP, the probability of any other cat dying of FIP is no higher than in any other cattery with endemic FECV (which is all catteries). Exceptions exist to this rule. The first is full-sib littermates of cats with FIP, which have a 0.25 to 0.5 probability of dying of FIP as well. The second exception is during rare epidemics that may be associated with spread of FIP (in contrast to the typical scenario of spread of FECV and periodic mutations to FIP virus).3 This type of spread of FIP virus has not been documented in natural epidemics and is unlikely, because FIP lesions are not in epithelial surfaces where the virus could be shed.
The second target is to prevent FIP in catteries with endemic FECV. This includes virtually all multiple-cat households, breeding catteries, shelters, foster homes, and other homes with more than five cats. Various tactics have been used. To be successful, they should focus on supporting cats' natural resistance to FIP virus phenotypes and reducing FECV challenge in these cats. In catteries, the major risk factor for FIP is the overall prevalence of FECV. Reducing the number of cats (especially kittens less than 12 months old) and keeping possibly FECV-contaminated surfaces clean can minimize population loads of FECV.
Vaccination is supposed to help cats fight FIP but has not proven to do so. Often cats do not seroconvert after vaccination, and study results are mixed as to whether vaccination has no effect versus a small effect. Although marginally if at all efficacious, the vaccine is safe and does not induce antibody-dependent enhanced FIP.
It is reasonable in breeding catteries to maximize heritable resistance to FIP. If a cat has two or more litters that develop FIP (at any age), then that cat should not be bred again. It would be rare for such a cat to have FIP, so it should be screened (complete blood count [CBC], serology, abdominal palpation, and possibly ultrasound). If no abnormalities are found, the animal should be neutered and placed for adoption. Particular attention should be paid to pedigrees of toms where FIP is over-represented. Because line breeding often uses valuable toms extensively, eliminating such toms may have a small but important effect on improving overall resistance.
Concurrently with palliative efforts, cattery managers should use education and communication to minimize adverse effects of FIP on cat populations. For example, if a shelter has a reputation for having FIP, adoptions may be reduced and cats may be euthanized for space. Cattery managers should have written information sheets or contracts informing buyers or adopters about FECV and FIP. They should understand that FECV is unavoidable in multiple-cat environments and that FIP is an unavoidable consequence of endemic FECV. It is particularly important that cats associated with the cattery be diagnosed accurately. For example, cats from shelters may have moderately high FECV titers not due to FIP and yet be euthanized inappropriately because of a history of having been at a shelter.
The last FIP-prevention scenario is to prevent or eliminate FECV, which is difficult. Isolation is not effective because of the ease with which FECV is transported on things such as clothes, shoes, dust, and cats' fur. As long as five or more cats live in a home, FECV infection maintains itself by infecting and reinfecting the same cats, whether or not the cats are separated. When the number of cats drops to five or fewer, it is much more difficult for the virus to sustain itself.
If depopulation is possible, a chance exists that endemic FECV can be induced to become extinct in the cat population. It is important to determine whether any cats are chronic FECV carriers so that they can be removed. Forty to 60% of cats in large multiple cat environments shed virus in their feces at any given time. About 20% will shed virus persistently, whereas 20% will be immune and not shed virus. Repeated PCR testing of feces should be performed at weekly intervals for 2 months or more to document carriers: if the cats remain persistently PCR-positive more than 6 weeks, they should be placed for adoption (only in very small catteries attempting to eradicate FECV).
Early weaning has been proposed as a means to interrupt transmission from adult cats to kittens. Unfortunately, queens may infect kittens as early as 5 to 6 weeks. This is prohibitively young to be removing kittens from the nurturing of the queen, particularly when the kittens likely will be exposed within a few weeks anyway. For early weaning to be effective, kittens should be taken to a new home (with no other cats) at 5 weeks of age. Even then, early weaning is not always successful.
To conclude, management of FIP should be directed at minimizing the population impact and accurately diagnosing and supporting individually affected cats. Vaccination neither prevents FIP nor FECV; testing and removing is ineffective. Thus cattery managers have few effective management tools. However, veterinarians need to be knowledge- able regarding both successful and unsuccessful strategies to provide useful counsel to their clients with multiple-cat households.

REFERENCES
1. Poland AM et al: Two related strains of feline infectious peritonitis virus isolated from immunocompromised cats infected with a feline enteric coronavirus, J Clin Microbiol 34:3180, 1996. Medline  Similar articles  
2. Vennema H et al: Feline infectious peritonitis viruses arise by mutation from endemic feline enteric coronaviruses, Virology 243:150, 1998. Medline  Similar articles  
3. Foley JE et al: Risk factors for feline infectious peritonitis among cats in multiple-cat environments with endemic feline enteric coronavirus, J Am Vet Med Assoc 210:1313, 1997. Medline  Similar articles  
4. Pedersen N: The history and interpretation of feline coronavirus serology, Fel Pract 23:46, 1995. Medline  Similar articles  
5. Loeffler DG et al: The incidence of naturally occurring antibodies against feline infectious peritonitis in selected cat populations, Fel Pract 8:43, 1978. Medline  Similar articles  
6. Barlough J: Cats, coronaviruses and coronavirus antibody tests, J Small Anim Pract 26:353, 1985. Medline  Similar articles  
7. Herrewegh APM et al: Detection of feline coronavirus RNA in feces, tissues, and body fluids of naturally infected cats by reverse transcriptase PCR, J Clin Microbiol 33:684, 1995. Medline  Similar articles  
8. Foley JE et al: Patterns of feline coronavirus infection and fecal shedding from cats in multiple-cat environments, J Am Vet Med Assoc 210:1307, 1997. Medline  Similar articles  
9. Peaston A et al: Evaluation of commercially available antibodies to cytokeratin, intermediate filaments and laminin in normal cat pinna, J Vet Diag Invest 4:306, 1992. Medline  Similar articles  


下面引用由VSLIN2006/02/06 07:38pm 發表的內容:
這也太誇張了吧~完全說錯~版主怎不糾正一下呀~版主發揮一下功能吧~

http://home.kimo.com.tw/changyuan/faq.htm#2

有時候網友發表意見時, 不需要太激動就能說的很清楚...
深呼吸.....輕鬆一下....
未符資格的網友, 請到不限資格區發表, 本文上鎖.
做尿檢.
可否提供一份完整的尿液分析報告?
膀胱發炎有很多種, 不全然一定都是感染所造成的問題.
看完醫生再說吧...好嗎?
下面引用由zu2006/01/18 07:09pm 發表的內容:
11.想問的問題 :
   1.以你們看來..貓咪這樣是正常的嗎?(醫生說以他們的立場..只要是貓咪能吃能喝.大小便正常就算是正常)
   2.我還需要讓貓咪做什麼檢查嗎?


1.以原主治醫師意見為主.
2.不妨加作尿液分析. 是不是膀胱炎...應以此檢查來認定才是....
下面引用由LUCKY喵2006/01/14 02:31pm 發表的內容:
怪叔叔黑心一點就有了
例如掛號費200元
病號一律做血檢
一次收個3000元
...

泥不要教壞囝仔大小.....
錢生不帶來,死不帶去, 黑心的話...小心生小孩沒xx(限)...  
ps.我們家兩個小朋友都有xx(限)...係金A....
不知道什麼是月入三,四十萬....
我從來沒看過...
真的有這麼好嗎?...
也許要等到自己跳進來才知道吧....    
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