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The following information is slightly
technical, but please read, for the
health of your precious cat.
BORDETELLA
Cats Don't Get Dog Diseases -- or Do
They?
By H. Dohrmann
A relatively new enemy to cats,
bordetella has been cultured n cats in
Texas, California, Washington, Virginia,
Michigan...at labson the Eat Coast, West
Coast, and all areas in between. It's an
easily spread bacteria that appears to
be on the increase, especially in the
cat fancy. It is considered a dog
disease and can be misdiagnosed in cats.
This article is written in hopes that it
will help keep your cats and kittens
healthy. Most of the information was
supplied by Anna Sadler (Brannaway
Persians) in Texas, and Pat Decano (Casa
Decano) in Washington, who have
firsthand knowledge of what bordetella
can do and had the courage to share
their experiences with fellow cat
fanciers.
Anna's Story: Before she finally
received confirmation of bordatella,
Anna and her vet had made the extremely
difficult decision to put down five
wonderful cats, two of which were
grands, on the premise that some unknown
virus was being spread through "carrier"
cats, and that these five cats had been
through multiple infections, therefore,
leading them to believe that they were
the culprits. All these cats, as well as
others of Anna's had been through
multiple viral cultures, all of which
came back negative....a viral culture
will not reveal bordetella, which is a
bacteria!
Anna heard about another vet who was
treating cats for bordetella,went to
him, and viola! -- the problem was
finally determined, six months AFTER all
the problems started! Anna's cats did
not need to die. If her vet had made a
proper diagnosis in the beginning, she
would probably still have those five
cats today. Please note: many vets will
not acknowledge that bordetella exists
in cats. Instead,they think there must
by an underlying cause (chlamydia, etc.)
for the symptoms. Anna kept her grief
and problems to herself until she
finally told the cat fanciers online in
this post:
"In the hopes of helping someone else,
I'll tell you folks the story of my last
year-and-a-half of hell. I may be a
dinosaur (in more ways than one), but in
the nearly 20 years of breeding, I have
never seriously considered quitting
until last year. Kitty Angell has an
article, with an interview with me, that
will be out in an upcoming Exhibitor
Edition of Cats Magazine with more
details than I can squeeze in here.
It began with a nasty, nagging little
upper respiratory infection. What set it
apart from some of the normal little
"flu's" that may hit from time to time,
is that even fully vaccinated adults
were getting it. It was very stubborn,
but would respond to antibiotics in
time. I beat a well-worn path to my
veterinarian's door, and I could paper
my walls with negative viral cultures
that were done. I, of course, shut down
and quit showing and breeding. I would
clear up Cat A, and Cats B and C would
break with it, and so on, round-robin,
with cats clearing and re-breaking time
after time.
Ultimately, we found it. The problem?
First, it's NOT a virus...it's a
bacteria. Secondly, cats don't "get
it"... it's a dog disease. Third,by
treating only those clearly asymptomatic
cats, the bacteria continues in those
that are not symptomatic and re-infects
other cats. What it is, is bordetella
bronchiseptica....kennel cough. And
symptoms to watch for are:
typical URI snotty nose, with varying
degrees of eye involvement from none at
all to moderate (rarely severe) the
"cough" which I didn't pick up on at
all,rather than a true cough, it is more
a gagging sound... like a cat trying
unsuccessfully to get up a hairball, and
only a few of my cats exhibited this
symptom at all. increase in neonate
deaths to pneumonia the perfectly
healthy cat/kitten one day...to dead the
next. This is a result of the cat
equivalent of "walking pneumonia". The
lungs are totally blown before even the
cat knows he is sick.
After we finally got the diagnosis, my
vet had me treat every cat in the house
for 7 solid weeks with a series of
appropriate antibiotics, then isolate
any that did rebreak for yet additional
treatment. We've also administered the
canine vaccines...both the modified-live
intranasal and the killed injectable.
(And do I even have to mention that my
house reeks of eau de clorox!!) Finally,
after 14 months, I have my first kittens
on the ground since the plague hit. They
are fat and sassy and beginning to
toddle now, and I'm hovering like an
overprotective mother. My vet believes I
have it licked, but I won't be really
secure until these kids grown completely
up. I believe it's in the shows, and
that anyone would be well-advised to
give the bordetella vaccine. Most
everyone I know in the Dallas/Fort Worth
area are doing so, and having virtually
no bad reactions."
TECHNICAL INFORMATION The abstract which
follows is reproduced from Veterinary
Record, 1993, September 11,
133(11):260-3. It was found by Linnea
Danielson, while she was roaming through
the National Library of Medicine's
Medline service. Feline bordetellosis:
challenge and vaccine studies. Four
eight-week-old cats, shown to be free
from feline calicivirus, feline
herpesvirus, and Chlamydia psittaci were
challenged with an aerosol of Bordetella
bronchiseptica. Within five days the
cats developed signs of respiratory
disease, characterized by nasal
discharge, sneezing, spontaneous or
induced coughing and dry or wet rales at
auscultation. These signs were present
for about 10 days, after which they
began to resolve. To test the protective
capacity of an experimental fimbrial
antigen-based subunit vaccine, 10
kittens were vaccinated twice, with two
weeks between the vaccinations, and five
kittens were left unvaccinated. Two
weeks after the booster the 15 kittens
were challenged with an aerosol of B.
bronchiseptica as the sole pathogen. On
the day of the challenge the vaccinated
kittens had a mean bordetella antibody
titer of 2(9.5) whereas the control cats
remained seronegative (titer <2(2)). The
control cats developed signs of
respiratory disease after challenge,
whereas the vaccinated cats were almost
completely protected. The degrees of
protection against rhinitis, sneezing,
spontaneous or induced coughing, and dry
or wet rales as auscultation were 100
percent, 95 percent, 95 percent, and 100
percent, respectively.
Furthermore, the vaccinated kittens
cleared the challenge bacteria more
quickly than the controls, resulting in
a reduction of 80 per cent on days 15
and 18 after challenge and a reduction
of 99 percent on days 22 and 29 after
challenge. The results show that B.
bronchiseptica can act as a primary
pathogen in cats and that a vaccine
containing the fimbrial antigen induces
a protective immune response.
DIAGNOSING BORDETELLA

A tracheal wash is
a must for a definitive diagnosis of
bordetella. From the tracheal wash, a
culture and sensitivity will be run to
determine the most effective medication.
Make SURE that it's indicated on the lab
order that a test specific for
bordatella is run (the labs don't
usually test for this if it's a feline
sample). Be sure the cats have NOT been
on any medications when you take them in
for the tracheal wash -- the culture's
results will not be accurate! It can>
mutate quickly to become resistant to
whatever medication you have been using,
which is why a culture and sensitivity
is recommended.
Symptoms that have been seen in
catteries with positive cultures: Dry
cough, and quite often some nasal
congestion and other typical URI
symptoms Typical URI snotty nose, with
varying degrees of eye involvement from
none at all to moderate (rarely severe)
The "cough" -- rather than a true cough,
is more a gagging sound Increase in
neonate death to pneumonia The perfectly
healthy cat or kitten one day...to dead
the next. This is a result of the cat
equivalent of walking pneumonia. The
lungs are totally blown before even the
cat knows he is sick. Kittens show few
symptoms and the end comes quickly:
small amounts of nasal discharge,
perhaps a choking cough/gagging.
TREATMENT
The biggest danger of this bug is in the
cases of TOTALLY asymptomatic cats!
These are the ones that are infecting
others and they are also the ones who
likely will be the rapid onset of
pneumonia death. If it> is bordetella,
the ONLY thing that will work is to
treat EVERY cat and kitten in the house
for at least 21-30 days, using different
antibiotics for different cases.
Baytril & Gentocin: at the high end of
the normal cat/kitten dose. On pregnant
and nursing girls we used a
cephalasporine at 4 times the
recommended dosage! Antirobe is an
alternative for pregnant/nursing
females. Gentocin and Chloramphenicol
cannot be given long-term because of
nephrotoxicity. Vets have had some
breeders in the Dallas-Fort Worth area
give everyone 5 days of Gentocin, then
follow up with Doxycycline or Baytril.
Primaxin may be THE single most
effective antibiotic. It has several
downsides, though. It must be given 3
times daily by intramuscular injection.
A 5-day course of treatment for one cat,
at wholesale cost, is approximately
$100. This is simply not practical for
large or multiple-cat households, but in
the case of that one very, very special
cat, keep it in mind. Anna used Primaxin
only on the 3 chronic girls, plus a
litter of 3 who were born to one of the
chronic girls, for 5 days, followed by
yet more doxycyline on the adults, and a
try at Tribrissen on the nursing
mom/kits. All cleared up. Since then,
two of the chronic girls have had some
minor sneezing bouts. Two of the kittens
have remained clear; one has not (and
appears to be chronic as well...not
sick, just continually snotty). One of
the chronic girls is a spay; and Anna is
considering spaying the other two, even
though the one that seems to have passed
this on to her kits is a DM. Another
person Anna knows, though, claims she
never had a kitten closer to death
recover, and sings the praises of the
drug.
Lorraine Shelton, another MIT Fancier's
List member and an immunology
researcher, states that it must be
treated aggressively with
erythromycin-class drugs (azithromycin),
and doxycylince, and recommends
vaccinating your remaining cats with the
canine intranasal vaccine. In Feline
Infectious Diseases, Chapter 23, Niels
C. Pedersen, says Bordetella
bronchiseptica pneumonia can be readily
treated with antibiotics, such as
chloramphenicol, gentamincin, kanamycin
and tetracycline and therapy should be
continued for about 14 days.
PREVENTION AND VACCINATION
Since there are no feline vaccines* for
bordetella, the canine vaccines are
being used for cats and quite
successfully. Anna's vet has her using
both kinds, the intranasal modified-live
and the killed injectable. There are a
few reactions to the intranasal, but
nothing severe. The intranasal dose can
be divided between two adult cats or 3>
kittens. The injectable should be given
in the full 1cc dose for both cats and
kittens. Kittens can have some transient
sneezing reactions to the intranasals.
* Note: August, 1998, a FELINE vaccine
for bordetalla is available! Please
check with your veterinarian about
vaccinating your kittens and cats with
it. For the breeders who are vaccinating
as a preventative, and have not had a
positive bordetella culture in their
cattery, Anna's vet recommends starting
kittens with the intranasal about the
time you begin their other
vaccines...just sandwiching it in weeks
between their regular vaccinations. In
Anna's case (and in other breeders who
have had active infection) the vet has
her starting all kittens at 3 weeks of
age with the intranasal.
Do you start all the cats with the
intranasal vaccine? Just the younger
ones with it and older ones with
injections? Anna says all her cats and
kittens get both. The intranasal is
designed to replicate only in the
mucosal passages, and gives the best
protection at the> site of infection.
The injectable gives a better serum
protection and is, therefore, also
better for mothers to pass on to babies
in the colostrum. That's why Anna's vet
recommends the use of both vaccines in
everyone. He further recommends that the
intranasal be administered twice yearly,
and the injectable once yearly.
Pat Decano who has also had bordetella,
follows Anna's vaccination schedule as
her guideline, and swears it's the one
she's going to follow forever because it
makes so much sense. She had previously
been using the suggested vaccination
schedule outlined in an article by cat
fanciers published in 1993.
Anna laments, "The down side is that 3
cats are left with chronic sinusitis,
but it's not bordatella. I can't bring
myself to put any more down, so I guess
I'll just have three cats who will
occasionally blow green snot allover the
place."
ZOONOSIS
During the height of the plague, Anna
hadn't been feeling up to snuff for a
couple of days. Then one night she went
to bed with chills and fever. She
thought it was a case of flu hitting.
Waking up before dawn with terrible
chest pains, she even called her
husbands' cardiologist! X-rays shows
Anna had fully involved walking
pneumonia with a spiked temperature of
105! She had never had a sniffle or
sneeze and she didn't think to draw the
parallel there until it was over...but
yet, bordatella can cross to humans as
well!
Pat also had walking pneumonia, last
May, and when she mentioned to her
doctor it might have been bordatella, he
said, "You mean bordatella pertussis?"
They don't know for sure if it was
because a bordetella culture wasn't done
on Pat. The doctor did mention at the
time that it could possibly be
legionnaire's disease. We don't know if
that is related. However, the bottom
line is that too few vets and physicians
acknowledge or understand what we, of
the the cat fancy, are experiencing.
Did you know....whooping cough is
another of bordetella (Bordatella
Pertusis). Interestingly, a local
newspaper reported there has been an
increase of whooping cough in the
Pacific Northwest where Pat lives.>
Kinda' makes you wonder!
I asked Anna a lot of questions, after
seeing her story online, since one of my
kittens had a funny swallow/gag reflex,
and died without any other symptoms a
couple days later. This kitten was up,
running around, and acting normal except
for the swallow/gag. I did culture
another kitten that I put down because
it was not responding to antibiotics,
and found pasturella, which does live in
cat's throats in small amounts all the
time. Treatment is basically the same as
for bordetella. We now vaccinate for
bordetella, starting with early vaccines
on the kittens. All the adults have been
vaccinated as well. Hopefully, this will
also act as a preventative to pasturella
as well! Anna states that the bordetella
vaccines appear to be doing their job in
the months since her original postings.
She's had several litters of kittens
grow up without a sniffle one, and go on
to their new pet homes with a clean bill
of health. Her vet has given her the
"all clear" to begin showing again for
the first time in nearly two years,
promising no danger of carrying this
plague into showhalls and passing it on
to other catteries.
Anna's tip for placing kittens or cats
while there are symptomatic cats in the
home is: Put them through a full two
weeks of antibiotics, then take them
immediately to the vet. Board the
kittens for a week without further
antibiotics. When no symptoms show up in
that time, it is felt safe for them to
go to their new home without danger of
infecting cats already in those homes.
If the kittens stay in the cattery while
there are symptomatic cats in the home,
there is the possibility that they would
be re-infected. In this case, the
boarding fee is reasonable and certainly
worth it for peace of mind.
BORDETELLA LITERATURE
There probably have been more articles
in the cat fancy on bordetella in cats
than there have been in veterinary
literature where it is only mentioned in
passing. Cat fanciers Sue Servies and
Brenda Kinnunen wrote an article a few
years ago from their experiences, called
Bordetella Bronchiseptica, describing
symptoms and treatment. It was first
published in the Scratch Sheet and later
recapped in Cat World International,
January/February 1993 issue, in the
Newsletter Nuggets column. CFA judge
Kitty Angell wrote about it in her Cat
Fancy column in January 1995. There is
an article in the July-Sept. 1995 f the
International Himalayan Society
Newsletter, by B. Kent Cooper, DVM.
FINAL MESSAGES
From Anna: "The testing is definitive;
proper treatment (proper antibiotics
along with treating every cat) can
eliminate the disease, and vaccines can
protect against it, so if the awareness
is there, there's no reason that this
disease should be as devastating as some
of the big baddies, like FIP or FeLV . .
. or even as devastating as I and some
other folks have experienced. A vaccine
specific for cats is the ultimate goal,
but we MUST interest some researchers in
this, because until there is a study
done, vets will continue to be skeptical
or simply overlook the possibility of
bordetella. I haven't kept actual count
of how many people I know with confirmed
cases, but I'd estimate that since I
began talking about it, the numbers of
people who have called me have gone on
up into the dozens. And my poor vet,
Kent Cooper, has patiently fielded calls
from breeders and their vets all over
the U.S. He just shakes his head in
amazement at our breeders' "grapevine."
In fact, perhaps you'd better add an
"Attaboy" and a big thanks to him on
behalf of ALL the breeders who have
benefited from his first zeroing in on
the problem and helping other breeders'
vets to deal with it." To Veterinarians:
Listen to what a breeder says. If we
don't seem to be medically educated,
take the time to find out what we are
trying to tell you. We are far more
observant than the average pet owner and
our cattery experiences are often the
preliminary field studies to formal
research that results in discoveries and
changes in veterinary knowledge. Pay
particular attention to the symptoms of
a runny nose with thick, slightly
discolored, or yellow discharge, or a
gagging-like cough. Check for bordetella
in any suspicious cases. It IS on the
rise in the cats. To Breeders: Start
vaccinating your cats and kittens
against bordetella as soon as you read
this. Take this article to your vet. If
your cats get bordetella, share your
experiences with others, and, if
possible, write about them so that even
more people will know about it. As Anna
says, "The key is awareness." Together,
with our vets, we can keep this new
enemy from becoming a major problem in
our cats.

I Am Your Cat
by
Donna Norris
Do not think of me as an object to bring
you fame in the show ring.
My most prized trophy is a gentle touch
from you.
Do not expect from me a new family of
babies every four months,
I love my little ones and want them with
me so I may teach and
play with them for many months as a good
mother should.
Do not keep me confined in a cage, I am
a free spirit,
Let me live with you in your home.
Do not think of me as an unknowing,
uncaring or
an independent being, for I need you.
Accept me as I am.
Care for me, love me and be my friend
I will give you in return:
A soft touch of my paw on your cheek
when you are troubled,
A companion when you are lonely,
A clown when you are depressed,
A trusting, loving, purring being,
content
to share your happiness and sorrow.
Let me be with you in our small part of
this world for
He has created you and me.
Do not think of me as a simple creature,
for I can see angels you cannot see.
I can feel the vibrations and wonders of
the universe
you can not feel,
And when the time comes when I will have
to leave you,
remember I will always be with you,
for our spirits are One.
Love me. Cherish me. Care for me.
I am your Cat
.
Bev Roberts | Breeder Support Manager |
Royal Canin USA
bev.roberts@royalcanin.us
Voice: (636) 926.1005 | Fax: (636)
229.0405
www.royalcanin.us

Leah Quesenberry
Bi-Color Persians
www.marshcovepersians.com
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