Juls and Billy
Member Since 2019
Feed him as much as you can. I'm not a ketone expert, but everyone says the treatment for ketones is hydration, insulin, and food. Diabetic kitties don't utilize food as well as non-diabetic kitties, and they often need much more food than a normal cat ( sometimes twice as much) since much of the calories are going straight into the litter box. With Ramesses' high BGL and other issues right now, if it were me, I'd feed him every single time he asks for food and leave food out for him while you're out of the house. Low carb wet food won't raise his BGL. All you need to do is pull any uneaten food up 2 hours before when you do your pre-shot test. That way he'll be hungry enough to eat when he gets his insulin, and the pre-test number won't be bumped up be recent feeding.
Just a question-- you aren't trying to make him get by on only 2 meals a day, are you? Too many vets suggest this (I know my vet did, but I ignored him because I used to be a diabetic myself.) Like all diabetics, cats often do better on many small meals a day rather than two big ones. And when the time comes, having food available will help Ramsses if his blood sugar drops too low. Cat's naturally get hungry when their blood glucose drops, and that can keep them from getting a hypo reaction.
Just a question-- you aren't trying to make him get by on only 2 meals a day, are you? Too many vets suggest this (I know my vet did, but I ignored him because I used to be a diabetic myself.) Like all diabetics, cats often do better on many small meals a day rather than two big ones. And when the time comes, having food available will help Ramsses if his blood sugar drops too low. Cat's naturally get hungry when their blood glucose drops, and that can keep them from getting a hypo reaction.

