rubygirl1968
Member Since 2016
Hi all, I'm Stephanie from NC and my cat, Jellybean, was just diagnosed with diabetes. I took him to the vet this past Friday because he was lethargic and not eating. They did blood work and called me yesterday with a diabetes diagnosis.
I have an appointment with them again this afternoon but have some questions for folks more knowledgeable than me and with more experience. I don't know his numbers but this is my fault. I let him get fat and now he's paying for it. After seeing his weight on the scales he and his other kitty siblings went on a low carb diet (canned only) on Friday and although they're not happy, they'll survive.
Anyway, after the vet visit and receiving fluids he has perked up and is acting normal now, except for a cold that came on over the weekend with much sneezing and eye discharge. My question is this - since the blood work was done Friday, it's now Tuesday and he's been eating canned only since then, and he's sick, will (or should) the vet run more blood work before prescribing insulin?
I've been reading and doing some research and now that if his number is really high the chances for remission are greater the sooner the numbers go back to normal, but hypoglycemia isn't good either.
I have an appointment with them again this afternoon but have some questions for folks more knowledgeable than me and with more experience. I don't know his numbers but this is my fault. I let him get fat and now he's paying for it. After seeing his weight on the scales he and his other kitty siblings went on a low carb diet (canned only) on Friday and although they're not happy, they'll survive.
Anyway, after the vet visit and receiving fluids he has perked up and is acting normal now, except for a cold that came on over the weekend with much sneezing and eye discharge. My question is this - since the blood work was done Friday, it's now Tuesday and he's been eating canned only since then, and he's sick, will (or should) the vet run more blood work before prescribing insulin?
I've been reading and doing some research and now that if his number is really high the chances for remission are greater the sooner the numbers go back to normal, but hypoglycemia isn't good either.