I've heard of steering. I might try it. When I see him with lower numbers I tend to let it go because I'm curious how low it will bring him just so I know for reference. I feel like it will help with dosing adjustments in the future.
Next question, how long does it normally take for a cat to get use to lower numbers?
a little of each is needed.Can I prevent a bounce or should you just accept that bounces are "normal?"
For sure! I wish I had the answerI know that.I wasn't really looking for an definite answer, but more so something that would give me an idea of what to expect. Like days, weeks, months.... Something along the lines of "it can take months before a cat gets use to lower numbers....". More like a time frameISH thing.
Thank you I was just thinking about how great a list of awesome links would be, earlier.Thsi Forum is a treasure box of practical experience.
HERE is the list of interesting discussions - collected over the years.
I hope you'll find something helpful.
That link is outdated (12/2014) and will be removed. Not removing it once it had been replaced was simply an oversight on my part.Thsi Forum is a treasure box of practical experience.
HERE is the list of interesting discussions - collected over the years.
I hope you'll find something helpful.
No problem at all!!Million apologies, @Mphair84 , for highjacking your condo, it’s just for one second!)
I think given the SS numbers it cannot be ruled out.do you think Tuffy has glucose toxicity?
It is possible. But having Dawn Syndrome looks just like that - higher in the AM. Not to be alarmed - it sounds more daunting than it really is.I assume that TK gets the high BGs in the morning because he bounces from the blue numbers at night.
I would not wait because it can enable the GT to settle in for good. And then it'll be harder to deal with.I just don't know if I should do something about the bounces or just wait for his body to fix itself.
The thing is you can overcome the Glucose Toxicity but if TK is a serious bouncer (like my Ducia) then the bounces will remain and go on after the GT is gone. And then you'll work on them bounces. JMO Better to exclude as many variables as possible. Getting rid of GT - if is GT we are looking at in the SS - will clear the picture for you.
When you do TR you increase every 6 cycles/3 days if no good nadirs are coming by adding 0.25U at a time .I'm okay with trying to rule it out, but how will I know that I am? How do I start the process of jump starting? I did read the link above, I just don't know exactly how to apply it.
once dry food is pout of the way you can try TR and that's the best thing to do IMHO.How do I start the process of jump starting?
With TR you (sort of) expose you cat to lower safe numbers time and again until the body got used to being in lower level than before. It means that sometimes TF can go unsafely low and will have to interfere with high carbs. Simple sugars such as found in honey, Karo or FF Gravy are absorbed trhu the mucus layer of the mount and take 15 - 25 min to affect the BG ECID thou.I know one can't be on TR with dry. I believe it's because the dry food stays in the system too long?? Why exactly can't one do TR on dry?
So does that mean that his levels won't be that low?The solid wet food often takes about 30-45 min, and the dry takes even longer which is not good/fast enough for a cat going down.
So if I change the dose every 3 days or so the way my schedule works I cant get mid day tests during the week. How do I know he doesn't get to low? Can I do TR with adjusting on weekends? Why is is not recommended to hold dose more than 3 days if not the numbers you like? Does it just like solidify the numbers you don't want?Then (if the dose is good) you will likely see good nadirs regularly interrupted by bouncing cycle(s) (how long is ECID but the TR suggests not holding doses for longer than 3 days).
I read it 400 times and tried to memorize it all at the begging, and then re-read afresh maybe a year ago and found something newI just read the TR thread for the 4th time. Lol.
.it is about 5% or 6% carbs if I am not mistaken which are totally acceptable levels and it is not what the TR minds.So the little dry he does is Young Again Zero, it's not supposed to have carbs.
not necessarily. And it is not what is wrong with dry.So does that mean that his levels won't be that low?
In short - no.Can I do TR with adjusting on weekends?
to prevent the Glucose Toxicity from settling in and muddle the waters.Why is is not recommended to hold dose more than 3 days if not the numbers you like?
Exactly. Keeping a dose that keeps cat in high numbers familiarizes cat's body to higher numbers and allows the GT to settle in setting thus the new higher norm for the body.Does it just like solidify the numbers you don't want?
I feel like I get it more. I don't mean to hang on it, but he eats wet all day and a few kibbles dry for a "treat" in the AM, and PM. I would definitely be steering with wet. Would dry food kind of be like making his BG levels inaccurate in a way? I'm just trying to wrap my mind around to understand it.sorry for being frustrating.The carbs levels are acceptable for a diabetic cat but what is not acceptable is its digestive "length" for the TR practitioner who MUST have the reliable tool that brings the BG up quick. The dry simply cannot be processed by GI fast enough for a cat that goes into a Hypo zone. Wet food, gravy especially, does fill that role.