Feline panleukopenia and feline parvovirus are essentially the same disease–virus relationship: feline panleukopenia is caused by feline parvovirus (FPV). FPV is the virus, and panleukopenia is the severe, often fatal illness it produces in cats.
🧬 How They’re Connected
1. Feline Parvovirus (FPV) = the virus
- FPV is a single‑stranded DNA parvovirus.
- It infects rapidly dividing cells, especially in the bone marrow, lymphoid tissues, and intestinal lining.
- It is extremely hardy and can survive up to a year in the environment.
2. Feline Panleukopenia = the disease caused by FPV
- When FPV infects a cat, it causes feline panleukopenia, also known as:
- feline distemper
- feline infectious enteritis
- feline parvoviral enteritis
- The name “panleukopenia” refers to the sharp drop in white blood cells, a hallmark of FPV infection.
🐱 Why the Terms Are Often Confused
- FPV and feline panleukopenia are so tightly linked that the terms are sometimes used interchangeably.
- Veterinary sources often refer to FPV as the feline panleukopenia virus because it is the exclusive cause of the disease.
🐾 Additional Notes
- Canine parvovirus (CPV) is closely related and can occasionally infect cats, but FPV remains the primary cause of feline panleukopenia.
- Vaccination is highly effective and the main reason the disease is less common in well‑cared‑for pet cats today.

