jtrezzo
Member Since 2015
Hello everyone, new here. I recently brought my boy, Cosmo, 8 years old, to the vet after he started urinating outside of the box, and also noticed that he was drinking more and naturally urinating more. It also seemed like he may be eating more. They did some lab tests and (after a $279 vet bill, which seems ridiculous) determined that he is diabetic. Now, try not to shun me, but I have been feeding him dry cat food (Nutro Max) which if I did the calculations correctly, contains 45% of calories from carbs, which from what I gather is BAD. What I have read says at least 50% protein, less than 35% fat, and less than 10% carbs should be in the diet, and really need to be fed wet canned food. I am first and foremost going to make the switch to a much better food ASAP (looking at Tiki & BFF, which I have to order online, and immediately going to at least get Royal Canin Ultra Light and whatever I can that meets the dietary criteria specified above at the store).
So, I am not wanting to start him on an insulin regimen until I can at least change the diet to the proper one, as I have read that it could even completely go into remission just based on dietary changes. I also read that if you change the diet, insulin doses would naturally need to change as well so I am thinking that is the first thing to do and judge it at a later time. The vet is wanting to charge what seems like hundreds more for "getting him set up on insulin" and the insulin itself, which at a librarian's salary who lives paycheck to paycheck, is simply not doable at the immediate time for me. I feel like I have been had by the vet and of course they are quick to put him on insulin to make a few hundred more off me.
What my questions come down to is this... Am I putting him in severe danger by not acting immediately? I have never noticed any SEVERE symptoms that make me believe it is life threatening. If I switch food and give it a couple weeks, is that acceptable?
Very confused and unsure at this point, so any help is greatly appreciated from people with experience!
So, I am not wanting to start him on an insulin regimen until I can at least change the diet to the proper one, as I have read that it could even completely go into remission just based on dietary changes. I also read that if you change the diet, insulin doses would naturally need to change as well so I am thinking that is the first thing to do and judge it at a later time. The vet is wanting to charge what seems like hundreds more for "getting him set up on insulin" and the insulin itself, which at a librarian's salary who lives paycheck to paycheck, is simply not doable at the immediate time for me. I feel like I have been had by the vet and of course they are quick to put him on insulin to make a few hundred more off me.
What my questions come down to is this... Am I putting him in severe danger by not acting immediately? I have never noticed any SEVERE symptoms that make me believe it is life threatening. If I switch food and give it a couple weeks, is that acceptable?
Very confused and unsure at this point, so any help is greatly appreciated from people with experience!