Vaccinate in the tail?

October 18th, 2018 at 10:17 am EST
Hello Friend,

Welcome to Thursday!

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 Vaccines, Cancer and Tail Injections

It’s estimated that about 1 to 10 out of every 10,000 cats vaccinated will develop cancer at the injection site. If 100 million cats are vaccinated, then we are looking at thousands of cats each year developing vaccine associated sarcomas.

This is a very aggressive, and difficult to treat cancer that I saw numerous times in practice.

Researchers believe that it is primarily linked to the rabies vaccine, and feline leukemia vaccine.

In practice I responded by decreasing the number of vaccines given, along with choosing to give the vaccines in the left or right lateral sides of the leg.

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The tail
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At the University of Florida, a study suggests that tail vaccinations are a good alternative to rear leg vaccinations. University of Florida veterinarians studied 60 cats.

Results

They studied two parameters- can you do this, and does it provide immunity?

The study suggests that there are no significant differences in the behavior of the cats that receive vaccinations below the knee and in the tail.

99% of cats that received the tail vaccines developed protective antibody titers.

The researchers came to the conclusion that tail vaccines work, are well tolerated, and that they can make surgical removale of vaccine sarcomas easy and effective.

A veterinarian would only need to remove the tail- this is a realtively simple procedure.


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Dr Jones' thoughts
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Vaccinate only for what is needed as infrequent as possible

1. If indoors, no vaccines

2. If outdoors

FVRCP vaccines at 8, 12 weeks
Rabies vaccine at 6 month

Titer check at 1 year, no further vaccines may be needed.

NO FeLv vaccine

If you are vaccinating, I would encourage using the tail, especially in adult cats receiving rabies vaccine.


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Best Wishes,

Dr Andrew Jones, DVM
P.S.There are many HOLISTIC options for preventing disease, as opposed to using vaccines.

In my Free DVD, you'll learn about some of these specific options.

http://www.theonlinevet.com


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DISCLAIMER: This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace the advice of your own veterinarian. Dr Andrew Jones resigned from the College of Veterinarians of B.C. effective December 1 2010, meaning he cannot answer specific questions about your pet's medical issues or make specific medical recommendations for your pet.

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