Thanks Deb. I was also asking on a Facebook group for advice and someone thought because the 0.5 dose dropped her quite low and faster than 5 mmol per hour on 31/3 that she could be on too high a dose and be bouncing. They thought she needed to be on a lower dose and to try it for 3 days.
Thanks for that explanation Bev, because Betsy's test numbers certainly did not indicate a need for a reduction.
I see you are giving that advice from that FB person a go. Hope it works.
But here is an explanation of bouncing and why it happens.
"Bouncing - Bouncing is simply a natural reaction to what the cat's system perceives as a BG value that is "too low". "Too low" is relative. If a cat is used to BGs in the 200's, 300's, or higher for a long time, then even a BG that drops to 150 can trigger a "bounce". Bouncing can also be triggered if the blood glucose drops too low and/or too fast.The pancreas, then the liver, release glucogon, glycogen and counter-regulatory hormones. The end result is a dumping of "sugar" into the bloodstream to save the cat from going hypoglycemic from a perceived low. The action is often referred to as "liver panic" or "panicky liver". *Usually*, a bounce will clear kitty's system within 3 days (6 cycles)."
Well Bev, you are going to get conflicting advice from different FB groups. The message board here FDMB, is only affiliated with one facebook group. This one,
Feline Diabetes. I'm a member in 4 different FB feline diabetes groups. Which ones are you in?
There are ways to slow down the "bouncing", by "feeding the curve". That is, giving your cat small meals at different times to slow down the drops in BG levels.