Barbara & Bindi
Member Since 2022
Over 10 years ago I had a diabetic cat and part of this forum, a lot has changed since! In March this year our 7 (almost 8) year old DHS Bindi had DKA, it took two vets to figure it out, but with intense round the clock care at home (subq fluid, temp testing, etc etc) she pulled through. She went from around 13-14 lbs to about 11.5 lbs and is holding pretty steady. She's been on 1 unit Lantus BID since mid March and I'm able to check her numbers twice a day, its always between 250-350 with sometimes a number higher/lower, but never over 380 or under 215. Even 3, 6 or 9 hours after her 1 unit, she doesn't seem to go up or down much. She eats the FF pate, and I have a mix of Wysong Epigen, Dr. Elseys and Young Again that I switched all cats to since they all are grazers and one needs low phosphorous because of her kidneys (non-diabetic cat). I can test her twice daily before insulin time, I try not to do more unless I really have to. She tolerates this routine and it works for our crazy zoo life (we have 3 cats, one new stray kitten, 3 dogs and 3 TNR cats outside. Oh and a business and full time jobs).
We have a good vet clinic, the vet encourages home testing and is open to suggestions. After the DKA was under control and he saw her BG numbers 'steady', his philosophy is that a cat can handle moderately high numbers better than going too low and I agree, not looking for a hypo emergency here... but I feel like we should be able to do better, whatever that may look like. Last week I bought a blood ketone meter and to my surprise, she has ketones in her blood but is not acting sick. She eats well, drinks normal, not lethargic, slaps the foster kitten around, does her 'normal' thing really nothing like she was mid March when she was so, so sick with DKA. Nothing like that at all, and had I not tested her for ketones, I would have never had a clue. Lowest was 0.5, highest was 5.7 on Sunday (this was the day after she had her vaccinations). I emailed the clinic to ask if they can let me know what her BK was when she has the DKA, waiting to hear back from them.
So my question is, should I try the start low go slow method to see if an increase in Lantus will bring her numbers down more so that she will be better regulated and would that improve the ketones in the blood?
We have a good vet clinic, the vet encourages home testing and is open to suggestions. After the DKA was under control and he saw her BG numbers 'steady', his philosophy is that a cat can handle moderately high numbers better than going too low and I agree, not looking for a hypo emergency here... but I feel like we should be able to do better, whatever that may look like. Last week I bought a blood ketone meter and to my surprise, she has ketones in her blood but is not acting sick. She eats well, drinks normal, not lethargic, slaps the foster kitten around, does her 'normal' thing really nothing like she was mid March when she was so, so sick with DKA. Nothing like that at all, and had I not tested her for ketones, I would have never had a clue. Lowest was 0.5, highest was 5.7 on Sunday (this was the day after she had her vaccinations). I emailed the clinic to ask if they can let me know what her BK was when she has the DKA, waiting to hear back from them.
So my question is, should I try the start low go slow method to see if an increase in Lantus will bring her numbers down more so that she will be better regulated and would that improve the ketones in the blood?