Kris & Teasel
Member Since 2016
I suggest you post on the ProZinc/PZI forum for insulin-specific advice. You can always post on this main forum for general questions.
You're welcome! I think things will fall into place now that you're embarking on a routine. I can't stress the importance of this enough.Kris and Teasel, I don't think I've said Thank You adequately. Thank you so very much. And Lisa and Smoky and Larry. Thank you.
If his PMPS (evening preshot BG number) is similar to what it was this AM he'll absolutely need a dose of insulin, Lois. Even if his preshot numbers drop a little below 200 over time, he'll still need small doses unless/until he reaches remission. Insulin needs to be given on a strict every 12 hour schedule in cats because they metabolize it quickly. Dosing in a hit or miss way causes spikes and dives and makes regulation almost impossible. You'll have to resign yourself to that.I think quite possibly no insulin tonight.
Yes!I need to take up the food now!
OK. Feed and give 0.5 u again tonight. Don't wait too long after feeding and the meal doesn't have to be large. No need for any more testing tonight. His ears will welcome the break. The same routine has to be repeated tomorrow. I'll be out when you post your AMPS - I'm 3 hours ahead of you (eastern Canada). If his AMPS is similar to this AM/PM, give 0.5 u again. Just building up your data collection ...280.
0.5 u and you don't need to set any alarms tonight. You can do one last BG test before you go to bed and that should do. You'll find that as you continue with a structured routine patterns will emerge on his spreadsheet and you won't have to test as much because there'll be more predictability.280. 7:30 pm.
1/2? 1/3?
Will be setting alarms tonight, the adrenaline wors off and I'm so tired, am napping when the cats nap.
I like that blue number. What type of syringe are you using - U40 with half unit marks? I ask because I want to know how you measure doses. We generally use 0.25 u increments, not 0.33 u.165 at 12:15 am, midnight ish
Had a big feed around 9:30, a good snack now.
Will give him a break on the sticks until 7 AM-ish.
It's a miracle! Thanks for staying on me until I got this!
292 this morning. .5 after some food. He's continuing to come back and eat more, which I like.
I had an alarm set, but both cats woke me up by standing over my face and meowing at me. I'd pulled food up at 4:45 a.m. while up to pee.
I have U-40s, two types from the vet, both of which only have one unit markings. I eyeball it, hold the syringe so the ceiling light from the next room shines through it. I'd asked the pharmacy and the vet for different types of syringes and neither had anything better than this. Where do people get U-40s with half markers?
Yes, that's correct. Sorry if I wasn't clear about that. It's wise to get at least one other test either mid day or before bed. If it seems that BG is dropping low-ish then more testing is in order.I didn't test him last night. I thought that's what you suggested. I tested this morning. My mistake obviously. In other words, don't vary from the routine of: AM test, food, shot; PM test, food, shot. What might vary is the # of tests in between AM and PM.
Probably food influenced.I had an appt and wasn't home until 6:25 to take up food. Tested at 7:45, 368, higher than last two nights; food, then shot at 8. Could the later time be the difference in BG, or 1.5 hrs fasting instead of 2 before testing?
Yes, a test at +5 is a good idea.Okay. I think I should check around +5 to be sure not too low.
Miralax and pumpkin not working super great yet, but he is pooping, just still hard nuggets that sometimes get stuck. One outside litter box this am, but improved over on the dining room table yesterday.
Logic says that if 0.5 u dropped his BG to 117 then 0.75 u should drop him further. That assumes a simple response to the insulin, ie., more insulin = lower BG. That's true for some cats who don't "bounce" or for bouncy cats some of the time. This phenomenon can make a dose that's too high look like a dose that's too low. I suggest you try searching this term on FDMB by using the search bar at the top right of this page. In a nutshell, bouncing is an overcompensation to a change in BG in which the cat's body converts glycogen stored in the liver to glucose for the bloodstream to counteract the perceived danger of BG dropping too low. The problem is that this response can be triggered by :I can do that.
His ear isn't bruised any more, it was good to take a break from so many sticks.
I don't quite follow the rationale but I'm game.
Assuming .5 sent him to a low of 117 -- if that's what you're looking at and I don't know that it is -- wouldn't .75 create a lower low?
I believe we can rule out plain pumpkin as a cause of change? And miralax apparently is inert for BG purposes.
Has he always been on PZI insulin? I know that Vetsulin/Novolin/NPH can drop them fast but as we say, ECID - "every cat is different". I suggest you finish up today's curve and go from there. It's possible that he reacted to the 50% increase from 0.5 u to 0.75 u. That's a big increase in proportion to the magnitude of the dose. You might have a lot of U40s in whole units left but I suggest you buy others with half unit marks. You could dose just over the 0.5 u line. At tiny doses like this there's a large margin of error when eyeballing between whole unit marks.Java was tested. Then fed. Then got a shot.
He consistently had big fast drops with insulin before, then gradual gains, under the erratic protocal I was trying before with the non-help from the vet.
Maybe it's from the increase from .5 to .75?
I don't know. It's possible he had a big drop and then a gain under .5 but I wasn't testing him that close to the AM dose.
Give 0.75 u tonight and do a +2 test because of what happened this AM. If this is his pattern you need to know that. Give him a snack around +2 or +2.5 is he seems to be diving. I'll be in bed when this late testing happens because I'm 3 hours ahead of you. If he's low-ish tomorrow AM I might suggest backing off on the dose. He's a low dose kitty and appears to be quite insulin sensitive. Caution is needed.Yes, always PZI. I didn't know there were other types until coming here.
Okay, will order some U-40s with .5 markers.
edit to add, stick with .75 for 3 days?
Yes, it's possible. If you'd feel more comfortable going back to 0.5 u this evening, that's fine. It's very difficult to explain individual BG numbers. What tells the story is the trend in numbers at various doses over time. The scattering of pinks, yellows , blues, etc. on the SS are revealing. That's why we keep stressing systematic data gathering.He laps up such small amounts at every feeding, I take his bowl to him several times over the morning. All day really.
I knew he had big drops from insulin from the handwritten graphs at the very top, 3 from historical info, and 1 from regular testing when I first got here.
If it's possible that a big low is created by a higher dose of insulin, then my hunch is that the 368 BG PM on 2/1 could have been ignored as a lone outlier, and .5 stuck to for a while longer. What do you think?
No problem. You can either wait until +9 for the next one or do a +8 to get back on track.Oh crikey, I'm an hour late. Okay, 332 at 4 PM, let's see. Thats +7