Bex and Penny (UK)
Member Since 2020
Hi all,
Sorry for the essay! Please not that I'm in the UK therefore values are in mmol/L. Link to spreadsheet: Penny's spreadsheet
I adopted Penny (she's around 15ish at a guess) in March and she was showing symptoms of being diabetic (eating a lot, drinking a lot, weeing a lot) from when we got her. I asked but apparently the vet didn't seem too concerned (I didn't speak to them) and we sort of put it down to a behavioural thing due to her living on the streets for the last few years/all her life. We took her to the vets around June as she was super lethargic, wasn't interested in food - very unlike Penny - and had diarrhoea and had been sick (probably her BG was all over the place, I feel awful that we didn't diagnose the diabetes earlier). The vets did bloods and gave her antibiotics but no urine check. The antibiotics did the trick and all her bloods came back fine and she was back to her normal (hungry, thirsty) self. Obviously the hunger and thirst didn't go away and we took her back a couple of weeks ago because she wasn't putting on weight despite being on double the amount of food she should have been. And finally she was diagnosed with diabetes. I'm frustrated we didn't check for it as soon as we adopted her, my gut was telling me it was diabetes or hyperthyroid, but we didn't and I can only learn from it! Anyway, long story short, she's likely been diabetic for quite some time but was diagnosed on the 11th September and started on Caninsulin on the 14th September.
She started on 1U twice a day; this got upped to 2U twice a day (aware this is quite a fast change in levels based on what I've read since and will push for smaller increases going forward) and she's been on 2.5U twice a day since Friday the 18th. She was going in every 2 days to get her BC read +5 after her morning insulin and the values were gradually dropping - from 36 to 31 to the 20s and her last vet reading on Wednesday (23rd) was 17. She's looking so much better, her eyes are brighter, she's drinking way less and she has so much more energy <3
I've now got a GlucoNavii human meter and started home testing on Saturday. We did a full curve Sunday and from this morning I will now be starting to test her every pre-shot and probably around 12pm and 1pm (i.e. +4 and +5 hours) to detect her lowest reading.
I need to email the vets today with her values. I was going to let them know about using a human meter and say I've been doing my research on this forum and send a link to her spreadsheet showing her curve from Sunday. She's still on her original food (which I worked out is around 15% carb calories) pre-insulin. I've found a suitable low carb (6%) food I want to try but I'm a bit nervous about making the transition.
I was thinking of telling the vet that I don't want to change her dosage at the moment while we are transitioning her. But what values do I need to be looking at/for when I change? Should we change suddenly on a weekend so we can do her curve rather than doing it gradually like you normally would if you changed foods? Should I be reducing the insulin dosage or keeping it the same? And how do I know how much to decrease it by? I will be asking the vet the same question but they hadn't really mentioned moving her to a lower carb diet so I'm not sure if they are fully informed on the effect of the food on her BG/insulin requirements. I'm terrified of sending her hypo. Are her curve values high enough that this is unlikely? Is there anything else you think I should be asking my vet?
Thank you if you've stayed with me this far! I keep going in waves of feeling like I'm on top of things (to be fair we've got the insulin injections and the testing sorted now so that's progress!) but other times I feel totally overwhelmed! We are also trying to sort out our hyperthyroid foster cat's dosage at the moment too so there's a lot of learning going on and everything seems to be happening at once! Thank you for your help <3 Penny and I really appreciate it, I'm so grateful for this community already!
Bex and Penny xx
Sorry for the essay! Please not that I'm in the UK therefore values are in mmol/L. Link to spreadsheet: Penny's spreadsheet
I adopted Penny (she's around 15ish at a guess) in March and she was showing symptoms of being diabetic (eating a lot, drinking a lot, weeing a lot) from when we got her. I asked but apparently the vet didn't seem too concerned (I didn't speak to them) and we sort of put it down to a behavioural thing due to her living on the streets for the last few years/all her life. We took her to the vets around June as she was super lethargic, wasn't interested in food - very unlike Penny - and had diarrhoea and had been sick (probably her BG was all over the place, I feel awful that we didn't diagnose the diabetes earlier). The vets did bloods and gave her antibiotics but no urine check. The antibiotics did the trick and all her bloods came back fine and she was back to her normal (hungry, thirsty) self. Obviously the hunger and thirst didn't go away and we took her back a couple of weeks ago because she wasn't putting on weight despite being on double the amount of food she should have been. And finally she was diagnosed with diabetes. I'm frustrated we didn't check for it as soon as we adopted her, my gut was telling me it was diabetes or hyperthyroid, but we didn't and I can only learn from it! Anyway, long story short, she's likely been diabetic for quite some time but was diagnosed on the 11th September and started on Caninsulin on the 14th September.
She started on 1U twice a day; this got upped to 2U twice a day (aware this is quite a fast change in levels based on what I've read since and will push for smaller increases going forward) and she's been on 2.5U twice a day since Friday the 18th. She was going in every 2 days to get her BC read +5 after her morning insulin and the values were gradually dropping - from 36 to 31 to the 20s and her last vet reading on Wednesday (23rd) was 17. She's looking so much better, her eyes are brighter, she's drinking way less and she has so much more energy <3
I've now got a GlucoNavii human meter and started home testing on Saturday. We did a full curve Sunday and from this morning I will now be starting to test her every pre-shot and probably around 12pm and 1pm (i.e. +4 and +5 hours) to detect her lowest reading.
I need to email the vets today with her values. I was going to let them know about using a human meter and say I've been doing my research on this forum and send a link to her spreadsheet showing her curve from Sunday. She's still on her original food (which I worked out is around 15% carb calories) pre-insulin. I've found a suitable low carb (6%) food I want to try but I'm a bit nervous about making the transition.
I was thinking of telling the vet that I don't want to change her dosage at the moment while we are transitioning her. But what values do I need to be looking at/for when I change? Should we change suddenly on a weekend so we can do her curve rather than doing it gradually like you normally would if you changed foods? Should I be reducing the insulin dosage or keeping it the same? And how do I know how much to decrease it by? I will be asking the vet the same question but they hadn't really mentioned moving her to a lower carb diet so I'm not sure if they are fully informed on the effect of the food on her BG/insulin requirements. I'm terrified of sending her hypo. Are her curve values high enough that this is unlikely? Is there anything else you think I should be asking my vet?
Thank you if you've stayed with me this far! I keep going in waves of feeling like I'm on top of things (to be fair we've got the insulin injections and the testing sorted now so that's progress!) but other times I feel totally overwhelmed! We are also trying to sort out our hyperthyroid foster cat's dosage at the moment too so there's a lot of learning going on and everything seems to be happening at once! Thank you for your help <3 Penny and I really appreciate it, I'm so grateful for this community already!
Bex and Penny xx
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I'm glad to hear that, thanks to your love and care, she's already starting to feel better. 
