Corey & Kitty
Member Since 2022
Hi everyone,
I'm sorry for the huge post. I don't know how detailed I should be.
My name is Corey, my cat named Kitty was recently diagnosed with diabetes. She will be 10 years old this August. I don't remember exactly when I noticed her pre-diagnosis symptoms, I believe the onset was gradual. I started seeing her laying with her head in her water dish drinking for 15 minutes straight and making gulping noises. I wasn't sure what was going on but I didn't think much of it in the beginning. She started becoming ravenous when it came to eating and drinking. I couldn't wash my hands in the sink without her begging me for water and I couldn't keep her away from her brother's food. What alarmed me was when I noticed she was dropping weight quite dramatically. At that point I began researching her symptoms and scheduled her an appointment with a vet. From my research, I suspected diabetes, but I didn't know much about how diabetes is treated in cats. Long story short, he diagnosed her with diabetes, kept her for the day for a glucose curve, and sent me home that evening with a prescription for Novolin N, 3 units twice a day. He didn't even give me a demonstration on how to administer it. Luckily I have experience injecting humans with vaccines (I'm a pharmacy technician) and so I was able to watch a few YouTube videos and I began my journey of treating my cat for diabetes. Also, I knew nothing about home testing at this point, he told me to come back in 2 weeks to check her glucose again.
Now, of course I did tons of internet research that night. Everything I was reading was telling me her dose is high and that I needed to change her diet right away. I spoke with the vet tech the next day and she told me not to change her diet, feed her exactly the same, we just need to focus on getting the glucose under control. I decided to go with their advice for the first two weeks, after all they are the ones with the advanced medical degrees. At the next visit he checked her glucose and it was still high. (mind you, he shaved her leg and used a syringe to get blood for the glucometer/test strip. Why would he do it that way when he could just use her ear for a small sample of blood?) He wanted to increase her insulin but I insisted we change her diet first. Was I wrong to want to do this? It feels wrong going against what the vet wants to do, but all the information online told me that we weren't going at this treatment the right way. He sent me home with a bag of Purina Pro Plan Vet Diets DM dry food (which he told me he doesn't even recommend) and he told me to call him in a couple weeks if she's still drinking too much. I transitioned her to the new food, but I knew she was still being overfed and I really wanted to switch her to canned food.
I started transitioning to canned food this Monday (3/28) and I began testing her glucose at home twice a day before meals. I watched many videos on how to home test and so far I've been pretty successful, although sometimes it takes a few pokes and I feel bad for making her bleed, but her ears seem to be starting to bleed easier now that I've done it a handful of times. Now, I'm getting nervous because I feel like I'm going at this without any guidance from the vet. I've read Dr. Lisa's information about transitioning to wet food while already on insulin. I understand that hypoglycemia is a big concern, and I'm very worried about it.
At this point, I'm feeding her 1/4 (one fourth) cup of the Purina dry food twice a day, along with 1 can of Fancy Feast classic pate twice a day with the dry food. She loves canned food and gobbles it all up in minutes, and she snacks on the dry food and its usually gone within 4-5 hours. I don't know if I jumped too quickly with how much dry food I took away. I'm still giving the full 3 units twice a day because her numbers have still been high. I forgot her insulin Monday morning (so mad at myself, I had a doctor appointment and completely forgot and it was several hours later when I remembered so I skipped it). So her glucose Monday evening was 356 mg/dL. Tuesday morning it was 350 mg/dL. Tuesday evening it was 296 mg/dL. This morning it was 345 mg/dL and tonight it was 285 mg/dL. I checked it again right after she ate her canned food tonight and right before giving insulin, just out of curiosity, and it had raised to 327 mg/dL.
I'm nervous about transitioning any further with the canned food because I know it is much less carbs than the dry food and I feel like I'm approaching this without the vet's guidance, but I haven't felt like he's interested in helping me change the diet. He hasn't even mentioned home testing. Should I call them and tell them what I'm doing, that I'm testing the glucose at home, and see if they will give me advice then? I don't feel like he knows the proper way to treat a cat for diabetes. I live in a small town, there is only one other vet in town and there is no guarantee they will treat my cat the right way either. Can I or should I be doing this without a vet's guidance? I don't know how to adjust her insulin dose if I start seeing much lower glucose numbers. Do you think I should take her to the other vet?
Again, I'm sorry for the huge post. I just didn't want to leave anything out. Am I going crazy? I just want to do what's best for my cat but I'm so nervous that I'm doing this wrong and it doesn't help that I feel like I have no support from the vet.
Thank you for any advice you can provide and feel free to correct me in any places I was wrong, I'm still learning about all this. I'll answer any questions you need me to.
I'm sorry for the huge post. I don't know how detailed I should be.
My name is Corey, my cat named Kitty was recently diagnosed with diabetes. She will be 10 years old this August. I don't remember exactly when I noticed her pre-diagnosis symptoms, I believe the onset was gradual. I started seeing her laying with her head in her water dish drinking for 15 minutes straight and making gulping noises. I wasn't sure what was going on but I didn't think much of it in the beginning. She started becoming ravenous when it came to eating and drinking. I couldn't wash my hands in the sink without her begging me for water and I couldn't keep her away from her brother's food. What alarmed me was when I noticed she was dropping weight quite dramatically. At that point I began researching her symptoms and scheduled her an appointment with a vet. From my research, I suspected diabetes, but I didn't know much about how diabetes is treated in cats. Long story short, he diagnosed her with diabetes, kept her for the day for a glucose curve, and sent me home that evening with a prescription for Novolin N, 3 units twice a day. He didn't even give me a demonstration on how to administer it. Luckily I have experience injecting humans with vaccines (I'm a pharmacy technician) and so I was able to watch a few YouTube videos and I began my journey of treating my cat for diabetes. Also, I knew nothing about home testing at this point, he told me to come back in 2 weeks to check her glucose again.
Now, of course I did tons of internet research that night. Everything I was reading was telling me her dose is high and that I needed to change her diet right away. I spoke with the vet tech the next day and she told me not to change her diet, feed her exactly the same, we just need to focus on getting the glucose under control. I decided to go with their advice for the first two weeks, after all they are the ones with the advanced medical degrees. At the next visit he checked her glucose and it was still high. (mind you, he shaved her leg and used a syringe to get blood for the glucometer/test strip. Why would he do it that way when he could just use her ear for a small sample of blood?) He wanted to increase her insulin but I insisted we change her diet first. Was I wrong to want to do this? It feels wrong going against what the vet wants to do, but all the information online told me that we weren't going at this treatment the right way. He sent me home with a bag of Purina Pro Plan Vet Diets DM dry food (which he told me he doesn't even recommend) and he told me to call him in a couple weeks if she's still drinking too much. I transitioned her to the new food, but I knew she was still being overfed and I really wanted to switch her to canned food.
I started transitioning to canned food this Monday (3/28) and I began testing her glucose at home twice a day before meals. I watched many videos on how to home test and so far I've been pretty successful, although sometimes it takes a few pokes and I feel bad for making her bleed, but her ears seem to be starting to bleed easier now that I've done it a handful of times. Now, I'm getting nervous because I feel like I'm going at this without any guidance from the vet. I've read Dr. Lisa's information about transitioning to wet food while already on insulin. I understand that hypoglycemia is a big concern, and I'm very worried about it.
At this point, I'm feeding her 1/4 (one fourth) cup of the Purina dry food twice a day, along with 1 can of Fancy Feast classic pate twice a day with the dry food. She loves canned food and gobbles it all up in minutes, and she snacks on the dry food and its usually gone within 4-5 hours. I don't know if I jumped too quickly with how much dry food I took away. I'm still giving the full 3 units twice a day because her numbers have still been high. I forgot her insulin Monday morning (so mad at myself, I had a doctor appointment and completely forgot and it was several hours later when I remembered so I skipped it). So her glucose Monday evening was 356 mg/dL. Tuesday morning it was 350 mg/dL. Tuesday evening it was 296 mg/dL. This morning it was 345 mg/dL and tonight it was 285 mg/dL. I checked it again right after she ate her canned food tonight and right before giving insulin, just out of curiosity, and it had raised to 327 mg/dL.
I'm nervous about transitioning any further with the canned food because I know it is much less carbs than the dry food and I feel like I'm approaching this without the vet's guidance, but I haven't felt like he's interested in helping me change the diet. He hasn't even mentioned home testing. Should I call them and tell them what I'm doing, that I'm testing the glucose at home, and see if they will give me advice then? I don't feel like he knows the proper way to treat a cat for diabetes. I live in a small town, there is only one other vet in town and there is no guarantee they will treat my cat the right way either. Can I or should I be doing this without a vet's guidance? I don't know how to adjust her insulin dose if I start seeing much lower glucose numbers. Do you think I should take her to the other vet?
Again, I'm sorry for the huge post. I just didn't want to leave anything out. Am I going crazy? I just want to do what's best for my cat but I'm so nervous that I'm doing this wrong and it doesn't help that I feel like I have no support from the vet.
Thank you for any advice you can provide and feel free to correct me in any places I was wrong, I'm still learning about all this. I'll answer any questions you need me to.
