I've been out and have just read about all of today's drama - very scary! The 3 unit dose is far too high and as Janet said above this hypo episode will leave him extra insulin sensitive. If it was my kitty I'd drop the dose down
a lot to 0.5 u twice a day for the next couple of days. This might be too low but with the extra sensitivity it's safer. It should get him calmed down some in his responses and it can be very gradually increased as needed.
Here's the new member's hand out I made up:
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It would help us if you set up your signature (light grey text under a post). Here's how:
- click on your name in the upper right corner of this page
- click on "signature" in the men that drops down
- type the following in the box that opens: kitty's name/age/date of diabetes diagnosis/insulin you're using /glucose meter you're using/what he eats/any other meds or health issues he has.
Another thing that will help us help you now that you've started BG testing at home is to set up a spreadsheet like the one we use here. We can all see it and look at it before offering advice:
http://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/threads/fdmb-spreadsheet-instructions.130337/
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Here's the basic testing routine we recommend:
- test every day AM and PM before feeding and injecting (no food at least 2 hours before) to see if the planned dose is safe
- test at least once near mid cycle or at bedtime daily to see how low the BG goes
- do extra tests on days off to fill in the response picture
- if indicated by consistently high numbers on your SS, increase the dose by no more than 0.25 u at a time so you don't accidentally go right past a good dose
- post here for advice whenever you're confused or unsure of what to do.
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Here's an explanation of what we call "bouncing". It explains why a kitty's BG can go from low to sky high:
- BG goes low OR lower than usual OR drops too quickly.
- Kitty's body panics and thinks there's danger (OMG! My BG is too low!).
- Complex physiologic processes take glycogen stored in the liver (I think of it as "bounce fuel"), convert it to glucose and dump it into the bloodstream to counteract the perceived dangerously low BG.
- These processes go into overdrive in kitties who are bounce prone and keep the BG propped up varying lengths of time (AKA bouncing).
- Bounce prone kitty repeats this until his body learns that healthy low numbers are safe. Some kitties are slow learners.
- Too high a dose of insulin can keep them bouncing over and over until the " bounce fuel" runs out and they crash - ie., have a hypo episode. That's why we worry so much about kitties that have had too high a starting dose prescribed by the vet and the owner isn't home testing.
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Here are some tips on how to do urine ketone testing (VERY important if BG is high and kitty isn't eating well!):
- put the end of the test strip right in his urine stream as he's peeing
- slip a shallow, long handled spoon under his backside to catch a little pee - you don't need much
- put a double layer of plastic wrap over his favourite part of the litter box and poke some depressions in it too catch pee.
Most test strips have to be dipped and allowed to develop for 15 seconds before viewing the colour change in very good light.
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The systematic testing routine I described above is how you can keep Benny safe. You'll be surprised how quickly it becomes second nature to you. You don't want a repeat of today's stressful situation.
The description of bouncing was posted above by Jessica (and Smokey). This is the reason you've seen some very high BG numbers along with those lows.
Re meters: your vet will likely want you to use the AlphaTrak meter but the strips are very expensive and you've seen how fast you go through them in a low BG situation like today. It's worth considering a human meter backup that uses cheaper strips that you can buy on short notice on weekends, etc. The ReliOn brand from Walmart is popular and two models, the Micro and the Confirm, take only a tiny blood drop to give a reading. Strips are $30+ per 100. You should be testing Benny before any further insulin doses because of what happened today and because you're resetting his dose for safety's sake.
You had a true baptism by fire today and can see why we're huge proponents of home testing. We don't want you to have to go through this again.

