Not at all. I was just the cheerleader;
you did all the saving!
That was a seriously prolonged run of low numbers but you kept your head and handled it incredibly well. As I mentioned above, I'd like to thank you for keeping all the updates coming because that really helps members here to help you (and does wonders for
our blood pressure!

).
Glad to hear that Ringo's back in safer numbers and holding steady at the vets. I'd be very interested to find out how his BG was in the first few hours at the vets (to determine whether there might have been any carryover of last night's dose into this morning's (skipped) cycle; it would be very valuable data to secure for future reference).
the Dr thinks it may be time to lower his long acting insulin dose
No thinking and no maybes required here. Ringo
absolutely needs to have his dose lowered. I know that he didn't eat enough but even so, based on what his levels were like during this cycle, there is a real possibility that Ringo's pancreas may have also been getting in on the act.
>> Is there any chance you could post the link to Ringo's spreadsheet here in this thread so we can have a look-see?
I'd also suggest that, if possible with your schedule, maybe you could give Ringo his Zofran dose with a water chaser about an hour or so before you're due to give him his pre-insulin feed? Perhaps it might help him to eat more at injection time?
>> Any joy with an Rx for cyproheptadine?
If you do get the cypro Rx you could then try administering that dose about 30 minutes before injection time (again with a syringed water chaser to wash the pill down properly), or at injection time itself. Even if it doesn't kick in right at injection time, it might help Ringo to eat a bit of extra food in the early part of the cycle.
You're a
phenomenal cat mama! Enjoy your well-deserved (and probably desperately-needed) coffee!
Mogs
.