I thought for a second that 75 was a bad strip or test, but he was acting really weird before I tested him. Like forging for food. Knocking avocados down, knocking over my vitamins, sniffing the floor for a drop of food. He was way more hungry than he usually is. Idk.Yoshi just hasn't found his good dose yet.
Here's what I see on your spreadsheet. I suspect the 78 was a bad strip or bad test. That green is out of sync with the rest of Yoshi's numbers. (It can be helpful to re-test if you get a number that doesn't seem to make sense it it's either way high or way low.) Based on that number, you reduced Yoshi's dose. Then, he tested at 299 which is relatively low for him and he bounced. Even with the dose increase back to 1.0u, there looks to be a bounce. It can take roughly 6 cycles for a bounce to clear which means that the bounce should clear tomorrow AM.
However, I also suspect that Yoshi needs more insulin. Taking all of the above into account, I understand your frustration but Lantus is a marathon and not a sprint. Don't expect an overnight miracle. You've been using Lantus for less than 2 weeks and you're still getting the hang of this insulin.
I’m not testing for them. He didn’t have them at the vet a week ago, but I should get some. I’m vet poor at the moment. I have to get new test strips soon. I’m almost outYeah like Sienne said, I always re-test if I get a result that seems outside the norm. I've found that sometimes the test strip will take up blood only along one half of the test strip and still give a reading but it winds up being a bad reading.
Are you testing for ketones at all? When you've got numbers in the 300,400,500 range it's always a good idea to keep an eye on them. Cats can handle high BG numbers that would kill a person but it's not without risks. But as long as there's no ketones, you're pretty okay. Again like Sienne said, it's a marathon not a sprint and as long as the cat is otherwise healthy, just gotta hang in there and be patient.


Thank you. When they bounce, do you typically lower the dose? Maybe I shouldn’t have gone back up to 1u after that 299?Yoshi just hasn't found his good dose yet.
Here's what I see on your spreadsheet. I suspect the 78 was a bad strip or bad test. That green is out of sync with the rest of Yoshi's numbers. (It can be helpful to re-test if you get a number that doesn't seem to make sense it it's either way high or way low.) Based on that number, you reduced Yoshi's dose. Then, he tested at 299 which is relatively low for him and he bounced. Even with the dose increase back to 1.0u, there looks to be a bounce. It can take roughly 6 cycles for a bounce to clear which means that the bounce should clear tomorrow AM.
However, I also suspect that Yoshi needs more insulin. Taking all of the above into account, I understand your frustration but Lantus is a marathon and not a sprint. Don't expect an overnight miracle. You've been using Lantus for less than 2 weeks and you're still getting the hang of this insulin.
I just put the date up. I didn’t realize. Thank you.I'm sorry about your vet. It might mean time to find a new one when you can. And I wonder if your old vet will be okay with Lantus if they were open to home testing.
If all else fails... you can order insulin online from https://rxcanada4less.com/
Edit: and just some housekeeping, would you mind putting the date on your thread? Helps those who scan quickly on the forum page to know if the numbers are for today. Thank you!
No. Bouncing means they are getting to lower numbers than they are used to, or dropping fast. Neither of those says “too much insulin”. Cats can bounce from yellows if they are aren’t used to it. If all a cat is getting is yellow nadirs, the dose is too low. The dosing method tells you when to lower or increase the dose.When they bounce, do you typically lower the dose?
I think for now I’m slgs because I can’t test as often as tr because of wk. I don’t know; I’m testing as often as I canNo. Bouncing means they are getting to lower numbers than they are used to, or dropping fast. Neither of those says “too much insulin”. Cats can bounce from yellows if they are aren’t used to it. If all a cat is getting is yellow nadirs, the dose is too low. The dosing method tells you when to lower or increase the dose.
Getting below the reduction point says they need to go down in dose. If you have decided on a dosing method, could you put TR or SLGS in your signature. That’ll help us help you because the reduction points differ for the two dosing methods,
Is a cycle an insulin shot (half day) or is it 2 (whole day)It is good to do the curve when the depot is full, so after six cycles at the same dose. In the mean time, random spot checks during the night or day when you can, will help answer the question on how low this dose is taking Yoshi.