Justin & Sebastian
Member Since 2019
Okay, Vetsulin is garbage. Just tested him and he's showing moderate ketones. I'm not sure what to do. No vet is open right now. Do I give him some Lantus?
No. My local vet that's around the corner opens at noon and they do.Do you have sub-q fluids you can give?
I know I'm sorry you got some bad advice from the vet, I can understand wanting to believe them.Yeah, per the vet's suggestion we went to 2u of Vetsulin.
Keep monitoring that, offer him some more food a little later, making sure he gets enough calories into him is important at this stage.He ate a little bit, maybe a 1/3 of what he usually eats.
He's behaving relatively normal.
Vetsulin usually lasts about 7-8 hours in the system (sometimes up to 10, but not with this low dose) with a nadir around 4-6 hours.You just shot the Vetsulin, so you would need to wait until you can be sure that it is out of his system before you shoot Lantus again. I'd be concerned about nadirs overlapping and BG dropping to low for you. I'm not sure what the usual nadir/duration of Vetsulin is.
It's good he is drinking and encouraging him to eat is a good plan for now.Urine testing for ketones. The reading came back at moderate (50).
He is drinking, he's made a few trips to the water fountain so far today. Just now in fact. And he is eating. He only picked at his normal food but if I break out the treats and put a few in his bowl he'll eat them up and a little more of the food.
I'm not sure if you know, but there is also a food transition in the mix from a high carb kibble to Dr Elseys LC kibble. Just so you are also aware. So it's unknnown if it's the kibble transition, or the vetsulin, also with the large dose of lantus that Sebastian was on the depot will possibly also be influencing that cycle with the 209. The previous DKA incident was a result of a similar suggestion by another vet, Sebastians dose was dropped and insulin swapped, this resulted in DKA two weeks later, so I think that's why Sebastians dad is worried.That 209 to yesterday isn't terrible.... Before today when was the last time you tested ketones?
Thanks for clarifying, I must have got the two mixed in my head when I read through all the condos yesterday.So I just mixed up a batch of tuna water for him. And I gave him the can with the scraps and he's currently licking every molecule out of it.
That timeline on the DKA is a little off. We did drop the dosage down to 3u per vet suggestion, this being after they tried us at 3, 4, and 5u with no change in BG, but it was still Lantus. Were at that level for a couple months and then the p'titis and DKA set in. The Vetsulin switch was recent, first attempt was 1/30 and we did that for a couple days until his ketone levels started to rise and we switched back to Lantus.
Thanks for all the info and getting others involved. And yeah, it's been a roller coaster.Thanks for clarifying, I must have got the two mixed in my head when I read through all the condos yesterday.
I don't know, it's promising that he's drinking and eating, perhaps if you can grab another ketostix test that might sway you one way or another. I'd be inclined to go to the vet if it was still reading moderate or rising, and monitor if it was just showing trace. I may be erring on the side of caution with that since I have no personal experience of dealing with DKA/Ketones, but I have seen them develop very fast on other kitties here on the board.So should I still go to the vet and get a sub-q shot or is the fact that he's drinking on his own and still eating a bit enough? I was planning on going tomorrow to get the blood draws for the IGF and IAA tests so I need to make a trip anyways, just wondering if going today and getting the shot is a good idea.
I think the issue is that he is not getting enough insulin. If you had reduced the dose to 2u of Lantus, my feeling is that you would have found yourself in the same predicament, this is what happened last time when you said they got you to try various lower doses of Lantus. You might start to see the BG move some once you complete the transition to LC completely. We've had numerous cats develop IAA or glucose toxicity and basically they eventually hit a break through dose which sees them in better numbers and start coming down the dosing scale. It has not been necessary to swap insulin. I suspect your vets are not familiar with Lantus and are just going back to something they feel more comfortable with.So I still don't understand why he throws ketones on the Vetsulin but not on the Lantus.
I'm speechless, given his history and the fact he was presenting with ketones in the urine. Good plan on getting a meter, hope you can get one today.they did not do a blood ketone check and just did a physical exam, so I'm going to go get a meter and do it myself.
I'm glad that he got some Subq but sorry that he had to start vomiting in order to get it. How is he doing since you got home? Are you still managing to get him to eat and drink? If he stops eating you may need to consider assist feeding.They did not give him a sub-q. Until we got into the lobby for checkout and he started vomitting. Then we took him back and they gave him an anti-nausea and sub-q bag, but nothing else.
I think that is a reasonable plan, my only worry is that because of the way lantus works, being a depot insulin, it takes a number of cycles for the dose to reach it's full potential therefore this may not address the problem quickly enough to prevent Sebastian from having another DKA episode.I'm also going to put him back on the Lantus at 7u tonight until they're able to provide me an adequate explanation for why the Vetsulin would be preferable and why he's getting sick on it and not the Lantus.
That's good, will you be able to see someone today? or is it going to be tomorrow?At this point I'm pretty much done with both these vets and am going to setup a consultation with another local vet.
This is a strategy that quite a number of us have followed.Otherwise I'll just pay lip-service to the current vet to keep getting his Lantus and whatever tests he needs and rely on you all for actual dosage guidelines.




