Maggie_Love
Member Since 2016
Hi all. New to Feline Diabetes Forum. Thanks for welcoming me.
I have uploaded a video of my cat, Maggie, having what my husband and I think to be an insulin overdose. I will copy paste description from video below:
"My 8 year old cat, Maggie, was recently diagnosed with feline diabetes. Since the unfortunate news, my husband and I have been instructed to provide Maggie with two insulin shots a day, 9AM and 9PM, as well as simultaneously feeding her a prescribed high calorie & high protein canned cat food. For the past three months this routine has done Maggie a lot of good. She has gained weight, her energy levels have increased, and her personality has really shined. We haven't had any complications until the night this video occurred.
Yes, we immediately made a vet appointment for the next day and Maggie was said to be perfectly healthy. This baffled us.
My husband and I have relentlessly searched high and low for any other internet sources that are similar to this incident as to figure out what exactly happened to Maggie. Also we thought maybe someone else might be out there in our shoes and is just as confused as we are.
Maggie has another vet appointment tomorrow for a fructosamine blood test. Until then we are hoping someone else out there might have an answer to what Maggie had to experience in this video.
Prior to this Maggie was dead asleep on our bed. She suddenly woke up and began moving her head back and forth. I put her onto the floor and she stumbled over. I woke up my husband and I began to record. She walked back and forth as seen in the beginning until eventually sitting down facing me. Her eyes trailed a nonexistent object in the distance until she suddenly fell solemn. I tried to push her bed towards her as she normally climbs in. No luck.
After the video is turned off we fed her food and she gobbled it up. Sooner after she perked back up and was back to normal. She was still a bit twitchy, but it soon subsided. This occurred 5-6 hours after her 9PM dose.
I hope someone can give us some insight.
-Maggie's parents"
Since this video she has had two vet visits. We are currently waiting on fructosamine test results. We have lowered her insulin from 1 unit to 1/2 unit and she has dramatically improved. She's acting like her old self again.
Thanks, everyone.
I have uploaded a video of my cat, Maggie, having what my husband and I think to be an insulin overdose. I will copy paste description from video below:
"My 8 year old cat, Maggie, was recently diagnosed with feline diabetes. Since the unfortunate news, my husband and I have been instructed to provide Maggie with two insulin shots a day, 9AM and 9PM, as well as simultaneously feeding her a prescribed high calorie & high protein canned cat food. For the past three months this routine has done Maggie a lot of good. She has gained weight, her energy levels have increased, and her personality has really shined. We haven't had any complications until the night this video occurred.
Yes, we immediately made a vet appointment for the next day and Maggie was said to be perfectly healthy. This baffled us.
My husband and I have relentlessly searched high and low for any other internet sources that are similar to this incident as to figure out what exactly happened to Maggie. Also we thought maybe someone else might be out there in our shoes and is just as confused as we are.
Maggie has another vet appointment tomorrow for a fructosamine blood test. Until then we are hoping someone else out there might have an answer to what Maggie had to experience in this video.
Prior to this Maggie was dead asleep on our bed. She suddenly woke up and began moving her head back and forth. I put her onto the floor and she stumbled over. I woke up my husband and I began to record. She walked back and forth as seen in the beginning until eventually sitting down facing me. Her eyes trailed a nonexistent object in the distance until she suddenly fell solemn. I tried to push her bed towards her as she normally climbs in. No luck.
After the video is turned off we fed her food and she gobbled it up. Sooner after she perked back up and was back to normal. She was still a bit twitchy, but it soon subsided. This occurred 5-6 hours after her 9PM dose.
I hope someone can give us some insight.
-Maggie's parents"
Since this video she has had two vet visits. We are currently waiting on fructosamine test results. We have lowered her insulin from 1 unit to 1/2 unit and she has dramatically improved. She's acting like her old self again.
Thanks, everyone.


Maggie_Love