Jennifer R.
Member Since 2019
My family and I rescued a light orange tabby, Simba, from a local animal shelter, who was said to be about 9 years old and diagnosed with diabetes when he was brought in to the shelter (he was seized by animal control from a cat hoarder, his original owner died). He was initially put on Royal Canin by the shelter, after the diagnosis and they started him out with 2 units of Lantus insulin, after which time they tested his fructosamine and determined his diabetes was still not controlled, so they increased it to 2.5 units. This all happened in October 2019.
We brought him home on October 24 2019 (this year), and continued him on that regemin. We took him to the vet in early November, where they tested his fructosamine again, and stated that his diabetes was now under control, and to continue with the 2.5 units of insulin and the same diet. We found that he was seeming to be always hungry, and would wake us up in the middle of the night to be fed, and even would sometimes bite us to try to get us to feed him. So at my husband's urging, I decided to research feline diabetes, and found this board. I finally got everything I needed and began testing his blood sugar, and found that it's not been high, and in fact was very low last night two hours after he got his evening dose (it registered 41 on the Relion Prime meter). I gave him some honey and some of the dry food to raise his blood sugar.
This morning, I cut back the Royal Canin dry food by 1 tablespoon (out of 4) and skipped his insulin. His blood sugar, which was 132 before his first meal, actually dropped to 86 by 10 am (2 hours after breakfast). He has been calmer, and not bitten anyone today. I have decided to cut back his dry food by another tablespoon, adding more wet food instead. He weighed 12.2 pounds at his last vet appointment, which was about the same at his previous 2, so I'm guessing that he doesn't need more calories, but was thinking that the volume of wet food should probably be a bit lower. Is there a way to figure out how many calories are in Royal Canin dry food?
We brought him home on October 24 2019 (this year), and continued him on that regemin. We took him to the vet in early November, where they tested his fructosamine again, and stated that his diabetes was now under control, and to continue with the 2.5 units of insulin and the same diet. We found that he was seeming to be always hungry, and would wake us up in the middle of the night to be fed, and even would sometimes bite us to try to get us to feed him. So at my husband's urging, I decided to research feline diabetes, and found this board. I finally got everything I needed and began testing his blood sugar, and found that it's not been high, and in fact was very low last night two hours after he got his evening dose (it registered 41 on the Relion Prime meter). I gave him some honey and some of the dry food to raise his blood sugar.
This morning, I cut back the Royal Canin dry food by 1 tablespoon (out of 4) and skipped his insulin. His blood sugar, which was 132 before his first meal, actually dropped to 86 by 10 am (2 hours after breakfast). He has been calmer, and not bitten anyone today. I have decided to cut back his dry food by another tablespoon, adding more wet food instead. He weighed 12.2 pounds at his last vet appointment, which was about the same at his previous 2, so I'm guessing that he doesn't need more calories, but was thinking that the volume of wet food should probably be a bit lower. Is there a way to figure out how many calories are in Royal Canin dry food?