Lauren and Loki
Member Since 2022
Hello!
My name is Lauren, and my sugar cat is Loki. He was diagnosed over a year ago in October 2021. This entire year, 2022, has been a really complicated year for me, personally, and Loki's care has suffered for it. Now, I am finally asking for some guidance from the forum. Thank heavens this place exists. I hope to give him the life he deserves. This post is kind of long and detailed, I'm sorry, but I assume the more details the better here. I cannot remember everything at the moment, but I really need to post about him, and can always look back at his history if clarification is needed somewhere.
To begin, after his diagnosis, his vet started him on a Freestyle Libre for at-home monitoring, along with Semglee insulin, which was a new glargine-type insulin, and interchangeable with Lantus. His response to Semglee wasn't great - he generally went between very high BG readings, to some pretty low BG readings. Never a steady curve. He was just kind of all over the place, and she did not like the number of low events he was having. So the vet eventually decided to switch him to ProZinc. He did respond a lot better to ProZinc, and he wound up being prescribed 4 units every 12 hours. He did greatly improve for some time. He was eating Purina D/M wet food for awhile, until I found this forum and learned I could try Tiki Cat and Fancy Feast pate.
Not long after his diagnosis, around January 2022, things got complicated for us. His vet wound up leaving the practice, so now I had no vet. On top of this, it was at a very unstable time in my life. I was living alone, facing eviction, and was behind on basically all my bills, so I was very distracted, and Loki seemed to be doing great, so I was (not ideally) just hoping that he would stay that way until I could figure out a game plan. He was no longer using the Libre since I had no vet to report to, nor was I testing his blood with a manual reader (I have yet to learn to do so. I really want and need to learn this. I did go out and buy basically everything this forum said to buy for at-home testing, I just have not practiced it). So I do not know what his readings have been all year, and he has never had a proper glucose curve done. I have been meaning to post here for some sort of guidance since I signed up to the forum in April 2022. However, around this time, I was forced to break my lease and move in with my father, which has been extremely stressful for me. This summer is about when Loki started to develop some clinical signs that he wasn't doing amazing. Over time, he was urinating more, very thirsty and hungry, and his spine was a little more boney, and his dandruff had returned. I knew I needed to get him into a vet, but I was trying to save money to get him care.
This is all important because time waits for no one, and Loki recently had to be hospitalized on 12/12/2022. I came home that night to find him "not himself." He was not really wanting to move, and was unsteady on his feet when he did walk, had dilated eyes, and not interested in food. I rushed him to the emergency pet hospital. He was experiencing DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis), and they learned he was now suffering from Acute Pancreatitis.
They were able to get him stable, and get his ketones greatly reduced (I believe from 4.8 down to 0.3). BUT, here is where the issue starts to come to light - they had him back on a glargine insulin, and he initially seemed fine, definitely compared to how he was when he got there. They prescribed him Lantus, and they sent him home on 12/16. However, immediately upon getting him home and out of his carrier, he did not seem okay. I thought it was maybe his pain meds (gabapentin) making him a bit loopy. So I called the hospital up to ask them. The tech said that he had not had a pain med dose for almost 9 hours, and that she was sure he was having a low BG event. So I had to turn around and bring him right back to the hospital. Sure enough, his BG was low, and he had to stay in the hospital again.
This event wound up triggering my memory that he had experienced these events on glargine before. So I let the doctors know this about his history, which they did listen and take that with great consideration. They are seeing how he is not becoming regulated on glargine. Now we are basically starting from scratch, almost as if he was just diagnosed again, only this time with pancreatitis. He is currently still at the hospital. I have been visiting him everyday, and he is definitely more his normal self, talkative and loving. However, since being back at the hospital, and on glargine, his ketones are back up to 4.3 as of this afternoon, up from the lowered 0.3 after his emergency. The internal medicine specialist was quite concerned about this of course, and definitely believes he is not responding well to the glargine insulin. (Why did his ketones come down at all on the glargine, just to go back up? I'm so confused!!) But his clinical signs improving are making it all confusing and complicated. So tonight the internal medicine specialist decided to try his usual ProZinc again, 2 units I believe, and we will see in the morning how he responded. She says that the pancreatitis flare up could have triggered this whole event, and the reason for his insulin doses to have stopped working. Diet is apparently how pancreatitis is controlled, so he needs to be back on a strict diet. The "what to feed him" conversation alone is so confusing to me, and now more complicated I think because of the pancreatitis.
The doctor feels that she definitely wants him back home as soon as possible to get a better idea of his readings, since the stress of being in the hospital can effect a true curve. She says as long as Loki's ketones come down, he can come home. He does have a Libre on him now, and will come home with one.
I am glad that I now have an internal medicine specialist taking over his case, and that I no longer am worried about looking for proper care. However, the advice of the doctors versus what I read here is so vastly different. Such as, they don't think he should have a Libre on all the time, or that I should even be needing to blood test at home. I think that is ridiculous to not be testing at home, and I do not understand why this seems to be the main way of dealing with this disease. It makes me feel like I am flying blind and "shooting" (literally) in the dark. Not to mention the different takes on diet. Now Loki also has pancreatitis and I'm not sure how to handle the diet for that with the diabetes. They are telling me that it has to be treated through a strict diet, eating only twice per day. They want him on a "diabetic" diet (prescription). I'm just not sure how the pancreatitis effects what the forum says I can feed him versus just having diabetes.
Overall, I have no idea what to expect, where to begin, and am very nervous for him to come home.
Sorry for such a long post, I figured it was all important for a full picture. Thank you for reading <3
My name is Lauren, and my sugar cat is Loki. He was diagnosed over a year ago in October 2021. This entire year, 2022, has been a really complicated year for me, personally, and Loki's care has suffered for it. Now, I am finally asking for some guidance from the forum. Thank heavens this place exists. I hope to give him the life he deserves. This post is kind of long and detailed, I'm sorry, but I assume the more details the better here. I cannot remember everything at the moment, but I really need to post about him, and can always look back at his history if clarification is needed somewhere.
To begin, after his diagnosis, his vet started him on a Freestyle Libre for at-home monitoring, along with Semglee insulin, which was a new glargine-type insulin, and interchangeable with Lantus. His response to Semglee wasn't great - he generally went between very high BG readings, to some pretty low BG readings. Never a steady curve. He was just kind of all over the place, and she did not like the number of low events he was having. So the vet eventually decided to switch him to ProZinc. He did respond a lot better to ProZinc, and he wound up being prescribed 4 units every 12 hours. He did greatly improve for some time. He was eating Purina D/M wet food for awhile, until I found this forum and learned I could try Tiki Cat and Fancy Feast pate.
Not long after his diagnosis, around January 2022, things got complicated for us. His vet wound up leaving the practice, so now I had no vet. On top of this, it was at a very unstable time in my life. I was living alone, facing eviction, and was behind on basically all my bills, so I was very distracted, and Loki seemed to be doing great, so I was (not ideally) just hoping that he would stay that way until I could figure out a game plan. He was no longer using the Libre since I had no vet to report to, nor was I testing his blood with a manual reader (I have yet to learn to do so. I really want and need to learn this. I did go out and buy basically everything this forum said to buy for at-home testing, I just have not practiced it). So I do not know what his readings have been all year, and he has never had a proper glucose curve done. I have been meaning to post here for some sort of guidance since I signed up to the forum in April 2022. However, around this time, I was forced to break my lease and move in with my father, which has been extremely stressful for me. This summer is about when Loki started to develop some clinical signs that he wasn't doing amazing. Over time, he was urinating more, very thirsty and hungry, and his spine was a little more boney, and his dandruff had returned. I knew I needed to get him into a vet, but I was trying to save money to get him care.
This is all important because time waits for no one, and Loki recently had to be hospitalized on 12/12/2022. I came home that night to find him "not himself." He was not really wanting to move, and was unsteady on his feet when he did walk, had dilated eyes, and not interested in food. I rushed him to the emergency pet hospital. He was experiencing DKA (diabetic ketoacidosis), and they learned he was now suffering from Acute Pancreatitis.
They were able to get him stable, and get his ketones greatly reduced (I believe from 4.8 down to 0.3). BUT, here is where the issue starts to come to light - they had him back on a glargine insulin, and he initially seemed fine, definitely compared to how he was when he got there. They prescribed him Lantus, and they sent him home on 12/16. However, immediately upon getting him home and out of his carrier, he did not seem okay. I thought it was maybe his pain meds (gabapentin) making him a bit loopy. So I called the hospital up to ask them. The tech said that he had not had a pain med dose for almost 9 hours, and that she was sure he was having a low BG event. So I had to turn around and bring him right back to the hospital. Sure enough, his BG was low, and he had to stay in the hospital again.
This event wound up triggering my memory that he had experienced these events on glargine before. So I let the doctors know this about his history, which they did listen and take that with great consideration. They are seeing how he is not becoming regulated on glargine. Now we are basically starting from scratch, almost as if he was just diagnosed again, only this time with pancreatitis. He is currently still at the hospital. I have been visiting him everyday, and he is definitely more his normal self, talkative and loving. However, since being back at the hospital, and on glargine, his ketones are back up to 4.3 as of this afternoon, up from the lowered 0.3 after his emergency. The internal medicine specialist was quite concerned about this of course, and definitely believes he is not responding well to the glargine insulin. (Why did his ketones come down at all on the glargine, just to go back up? I'm so confused!!) But his clinical signs improving are making it all confusing and complicated. So tonight the internal medicine specialist decided to try his usual ProZinc again, 2 units I believe, and we will see in the morning how he responded. She says that the pancreatitis flare up could have triggered this whole event, and the reason for his insulin doses to have stopped working. Diet is apparently how pancreatitis is controlled, so he needs to be back on a strict diet. The "what to feed him" conversation alone is so confusing to me, and now more complicated I think because of the pancreatitis.
The doctor feels that she definitely wants him back home as soon as possible to get a better idea of his readings, since the stress of being in the hospital can effect a true curve. She says as long as Loki's ketones come down, he can come home. He does have a Libre on him now, and will come home with one.
I am glad that I now have an internal medicine specialist taking over his case, and that I no longer am worried about looking for proper care. However, the advice of the doctors versus what I read here is so vastly different. Such as, they don't think he should have a Libre on all the time, or that I should even be needing to blood test at home. I think that is ridiculous to not be testing at home, and I do not understand why this seems to be the main way of dealing with this disease. It makes me feel like I am flying blind and "shooting" (literally) in the dark. Not to mention the different takes on diet. Now Loki also has pancreatitis and I'm not sure how to handle the diet for that with the diabetes. They are telling me that it has to be treated through a strict diet, eating only twice per day. They want him on a "diabetic" diet (prescription). I'm just not sure how the pancreatitis effects what the forum says I can feed him versus just having diabetes.
Overall, I have no idea what to expect, where to begin, and am very nervous for him to come home.
Sorry for such a long post, I figured it was all important for a full picture. Thank you for reading <3


