Fip In Cats Contagious To Other Cats
Many cats that develop FIP have no history of contact with other cats showing clinical signs of FIP.
Fip in cats contagious to other cats. One of the complicated aspects of FIP is that while Feline Coronavirus FCoV is very common Feline Infectious Peritonitis is rare. The disease is progressive and eventually fatal. Answered 3 years ago Author has 47K answers and 22M answer views.
In others the virus may cause inflammation affecting the brain eyes. Feline infectious peritonitis is a fatal disease suffered by cats and kittens. Infection occurs by inhalation or ingestion of the virus.
Unvaccinated cats catch feline infectious peritonitis FIP through close contact with other felines. FIP is associated with a viral infection called feline coronavirus. Thus we now know that the vast majority of cats do not catch FIP but they develop it themselves from their own mutant FECV.
While FIP is not contagious there does seem to be a genetic component to which cats are more prone to the mutation which is why we sometimes see it in cats related to each other. Although FIP is not highly contagious infected cats can transmit the virus through body fluids respiratory and oral secretions and feces. Even with the more harmful strains apparently healthy cats may be carriers of the virus and may shed the virus without ever showing signs of disease.
Feline infectious peritonitis fip is a viral disease in cats which carries a high mortality due to its characteristic aggressiveness and nonresponsiveness to fever along with other complications. As time goes by infected cats may have more FIP symptoms that depend on the form of FIP. Feline enteric coronavirus strains can mutate to the more harmful type of virus and cause FIP disease.
As long as you thoroughly disinfect the toys beds bowls etc they should be safe for another cat. It occurs in a very small proportion of cats or kittens and is caused by a common virus called feline coronavirus. How Cats Get Feline Infectious Peritonitis.