Melissa & Tiger
Member Since 2016
Hi, this is my first post on the forum! 
It's going to be a little long. Sorry in advance!
My name is Melissa from California and I have a 7 year old sweet guy named tiger. In January, while I was out of the country and my parents were cat-sitters, he was diagnosed. A lot took place over the next few months to try to regulate and in hopes of reversing his diabetes. All failed efforts.
Now I'm back in the states and learning to handle his diabetes all on my own. There is so much info online as well as contradicting ideas from his old vet and his new one. To say it's all very confusing and frustrating would be an understatement. I feel pretty lost doing this all on my own, just the two of us working and relying on each other to figure it all out! Any help from veteran diabetic cat owners is much appreciated!
He's been diabetic 10 months now and we have upped his insulin dose to 4 units twice a day as well as two feedings of purina DM wet food before his injections. But his numbers are always all over the place and it feels like we are always just upping his insulin and hoping something will change, with little to show for it.
So I have a few questions!
First: I've just gotten comfortable with home testing in the last few weeks. Before this we were blindly giving insulin twice a day. Is it recommended to check glucose EVERYTIME before injection. Or is it ok to test only occasionally?
Second: if his reading is under 250 I was told not to give insulin but to check again at the 6 hour mark. If his number goes up then is there a protocol or would I just wait until his dinner feeding and give the insulin then?
Third: he is on the perscription food which is costing me a fortune! I've read many posts that say feeding super market wet food is fine. I'm shocked because the vet made it sound like the perscription was very important! Is friskies really an ok option? Is there another brand that other members like that's more in the midrange? Would changing the food brand be ok to do cold turnkey? Doing so would save me $$ but I'll only do if it's in tigers best interests.
Forth: he gets fed one can twice a day which the vet said is more then enough cals for his body weight. But this guy is ALWAYS hungry. He wakes me up at 5am for breakfast and follows me around the kitchen nipping at me and meowing the moment I get home from work. I read that many people split up their meals but my vet told me this was not a good thing to do since feeding raises their glucose and it is best to only feed when giving insulin to counter act it. I'm torn on what to do. Does anyone have any recommendations for helping my little guy not be so ravenous through out the day?
I think that's all the questions I have for now. I'm just hoping to try to get him in a good place where his numbers aren't all over the place. And in the process I'm learning a lot about the disease as well so i can be the best diabetic cat mama I can be! Thanks to anyone who can answer any of the questions!
It's going to be a little long. Sorry in advance!
My name is Melissa from California and I have a 7 year old sweet guy named tiger. In January, while I was out of the country and my parents were cat-sitters, he was diagnosed. A lot took place over the next few months to try to regulate and in hopes of reversing his diabetes. All failed efforts.
Now I'm back in the states and learning to handle his diabetes all on my own. There is so much info online as well as contradicting ideas from his old vet and his new one. To say it's all very confusing and frustrating would be an understatement. I feel pretty lost doing this all on my own, just the two of us working and relying on each other to figure it all out! Any help from veteran diabetic cat owners is much appreciated!
He's been diabetic 10 months now and we have upped his insulin dose to 4 units twice a day as well as two feedings of purina DM wet food before his injections. But his numbers are always all over the place and it feels like we are always just upping his insulin and hoping something will change, with little to show for it.
So I have a few questions!
First: I've just gotten comfortable with home testing in the last few weeks. Before this we were blindly giving insulin twice a day. Is it recommended to check glucose EVERYTIME before injection. Or is it ok to test only occasionally?
Second: if his reading is under 250 I was told not to give insulin but to check again at the 6 hour mark. If his number goes up then is there a protocol or would I just wait until his dinner feeding and give the insulin then?
Third: he is on the perscription food which is costing me a fortune! I've read many posts that say feeding super market wet food is fine. I'm shocked because the vet made it sound like the perscription was very important! Is friskies really an ok option? Is there another brand that other members like that's more in the midrange? Would changing the food brand be ok to do cold turnkey? Doing so would save me $$ but I'll only do if it's in tigers best interests.
Forth: he gets fed one can twice a day which the vet said is more then enough cals for his body weight. But this guy is ALWAYS hungry. He wakes me up at 5am for breakfast and follows me around the kitchen nipping at me and meowing the moment I get home from work. I read that many people split up their meals but my vet told me this was not a good thing to do since feeding raises their glucose and it is best to only feed when giving insulin to counter act it. I'm torn on what to do. Does anyone have any recommendations for helping my little guy not be so ravenous through out the day?
I think that's all the questions I have for now. I'm just hoping to try to get him in a good place where his numbers aren't all over the place. And in the process I'm learning a lot about the disease as well so i can be the best diabetic cat mama I can be! Thanks to anyone who can answer any of the questions!
Smaller meals put less stress on the pancreas. With lantus onset of the insulin is usually around +2 hours after the shot with nadir falling between +5 to +7 in most cats most of the time. Many people like to get all the mini meals for the cycle finished before nadir so that the kitty isn't feeding while the insulin is starting to wane but there are others (myself included) that let lantus kitties free feed (if they aren't gutses or overweight) and just remove the food two hours before shot time so as to make sure the preshot test isn't food influenced so you know that it's safe to shoot.