alayna
Member Since 2019
Hey all. I'm in a really tough spot with my cat and I'm looking for some words of wisdom. Frankie has just started back up on insulin after a year of remission, but this time it's looking a lot worse. When he was first diagnosed, he was somewhere in the 500s (mg/dl) but the only symptoms were the drinking, peeing, and a little touch of lethargy. But for some reason this time around, he's become like a vegetable... only laying in one or two spots, never walking around -- and when he does, he trips and wobbles. He's been just laying down for several days so I'm assuming he's very weak at this point. He's lost a lot of weight, around 0.6 lbs over the past couple months, and the ridge of his spine is visible.
I've had to syringe feed him previously, when the vet diagnosed him with IBD and figured he was refusing to eat because he had been so backed up it was making him sick. His symptoms then were excessive gulping, retching, and occasionally vomiting mucus. I had to put him on a dry GI food for a while to help him with that situation, and it did, he got a lot better...normal BMs and eating normally... however, I think that dry food triggered a relapse.
I just don't understand why he's so frail and refuses to eat (or even drink) now. The vet said he probably was feeling too bad because of his BG to eat, but that doesn't really make sense to me because in clinic his highest was 370. They said the glucose in his urine was. "1000". Why would that make him completely refuse to eat, when only 2 years ago his BG was in the 500s and that didn't affect his appetite at all? He got full bloodwork and urinalysis and everything else looked okay. He is not displaying the same symptoms of bowel obstruction as before, only the refusal to eat.
It's just tough syringe feeding him twice a day, and then shooting afterwards... I was honestly happy to put him back on insulin because of how much energy it gave him last time around (he acted like a young cat again), but this time it seems to not really effect his energy at all. I'm waiting for an Alpha Trak to come in the mail, but in the meantime I've been taking crude BG tests using an old ReliOn meter and he's not bottoming out. (I say crude because I'm not yet able to produce enough blood to really get an accurate result on a human meter.) Some readings I got were 166, 230. The 166 was 2 hours after shooting, and the 230 was 5 hours after.
Has anyone here gone through something similar, having to force feed while on insulin? My heart hurts to think that Frankie might reaching the end of his life.
If I'm still having to force feed by Monday I'm calling the vet, but I don't know what that could even accomplish at this point...
Some info:
I've had to syringe feed him previously, when the vet diagnosed him with IBD and figured he was refusing to eat because he had been so backed up it was making him sick. His symptoms then were excessive gulping, retching, and occasionally vomiting mucus. I had to put him on a dry GI food for a while to help him with that situation, and it did, he got a lot better...normal BMs and eating normally... however, I think that dry food triggered a relapse.
I just don't understand why he's so frail and refuses to eat (or even drink) now. The vet said he probably was feeling too bad because of his BG to eat, but that doesn't really make sense to me because in clinic his highest was 370. They said the glucose in his urine was. "1000". Why would that make him completely refuse to eat, when only 2 years ago his BG was in the 500s and that didn't affect his appetite at all? He got full bloodwork and urinalysis and everything else looked okay. He is not displaying the same symptoms of bowel obstruction as before, only the refusal to eat.
It's just tough syringe feeding him twice a day, and then shooting afterwards... I was honestly happy to put him back on insulin because of how much energy it gave him last time around (he acted like a young cat again), but this time it seems to not really effect his energy at all. I'm waiting for an Alpha Trak to come in the mail, but in the meantime I've been taking crude BG tests using an old ReliOn meter and he's not bottoming out. (I say crude because I'm not yet able to produce enough blood to really get an accurate result on a human meter.) Some readings I got were 166, 230. The 166 was 2 hours after shooting, and the 230 was 5 hours after.
Has anyone here gone through something similar, having to force feed while on insulin? My heart hurts to think that Frankie might reaching the end of his life.
If I'm still having to force feed by Monday I'm calling the vet, but I don't know what that could even accomplish at this point...
Some info:
- Male, neutered
- 12 Years old (born 2008)
- Domestic shorthair / siamese
- 12.4 lbs and underweight for his size
- Vetsulin, 1 unit BID (I want to switch him to Prozinc if he's not looking better by the end of this weekend because that's what I've used in the past)
- Fancy feast Beef Pate Senior 7+ 3 oz can BID
- I gave him 1/8 tsp MiraLax this morning
- On insulin Jan 2019-June 2019, Remission until now (October 2020)
You will need cerenia a vet medication for nausea and if you can get it from the vet an RX for the human nausea medication, ondansetron. Buprenorphine is a good pain medication. This is all if it’s pancreatitis.