Jessie's Girl
Member Since 2019
Hi, everyone! My name is Abby and my cat Jessie (13 yrs old) was just diagnosed with diabetes yesterday evening. Since then, I feel like all I've done is research non-stop, and though I'm feeling overwhelmed, I am determined to do everything I can for her. Can anyone offer advice/let me know if my plan of action sounds good?
Before the diagnosis, Jessie ate a diet of some dry food as well as a can or two of Fancy Feast's Gravy Lovers. Now I know that she needs to be high protein/low carb, so I went out and bought some Fancy Feast Purely Natural, and tossed the dry food. My vet recommends starting her on twice-daily Lantus, but my new concern is that her previous blood glucose reading (above 500) won't be accurate anymore because of the new diet, and I'm terrified of Hypoglycemia. My plan is to wait another 4-5 days on this new diet, get her blood tested again, and then proceed with insulin from there? Or would it be better to just start now, on a very low dose?
I've read essentially all of Dr. Pierson's website, and I've got plans in the works to make my own cat food now. I'm very nervous about checking the blood glucose on my own and of injecting her, mostly because she is an intensely shy, skittish, and anxious cat. Of my whole family, I'm the only one she trusts to pet and cuddle with her, and I'm worried she won't take well to being injected, especially since I won't be the only one doing it. Can any owners of anxious cats offer advice?
Thank you so much for reading!!
<3
Abby
Before the diagnosis, Jessie ate a diet of some dry food as well as a can or two of Fancy Feast's Gravy Lovers. Now I know that she needs to be high protein/low carb, so I went out and bought some Fancy Feast Purely Natural, and tossed the dry food. My vet recommends starting her on twice-daily Lantus, but my new concern is that her previous blood glucose reading (above 500) won't be accurate anymore because of the new diet, and I'm terrified of Hypoglycemia. My plan is to wait another 4-5 days on this new diet, get her blood tested again, and then proceed with insulin from there? Or would it be better to just start now, on a very low dose?
I've read essentially all of Dr. Pierson's website, and I've got plans in the works to make my own cat food now. I'm very nervous about checking the blood glucose on my own and of injecting her, mostly because she is an intensely shy, skittish, and anxious cat. Of my whole family, I'm the only one she trusts to pet and cuddle with her, and I'm worried she won't take well to being injected, especially since I won't be the only one doing it. Can any owners of anxious cats offer advice?
Thank you so much for reading!!
<3
Abby
