egwv
Member Since 2022
Continuing from earlier thread here https://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB...increasingly-picky-eater.278522/#post-3081913
Hi all,
Continuing Kit's progress in this new thread. Summary up to this point: I took Kit to the emergency vet on Saturday since she had a high ketones on her urine test strip after a few weeks of decreasing appetite. She stayed at the emergency vet until Monday morning (yesterday) when she transferred to the internal medicine department of a different hospital to be seen by an internal medicine specialist. They are trying to identify what triggered the DKA episode and get her appetite back.
I visited Kit this morning before work. She was happy to see me and ate 3 Churu tube treats (she inhaled the first two and took a little more time to eat the third but she finished it all). The vet tech said the overnight nurses had a hard time hearing Kit's heartbeat because she was purring so loudly. Her BG levels are back up in the 300s (I was there when the tech took Kit's 8am measurement and it was 330) and her ketones are 3.2. They are still waiting on the urinalysis results. I am supposed to get an official morning update later, and I will try to visit her again later today when I go home from work.
I don't know yet if she'll be able to go home tomorrow or if she'll have to stay another day or two, but I have been reading the links from my previous thread on tube feeding. The doctor warned me that diabetic cats are at a higher risk of complications from general anesthesia which has me worried about inserting a tube in her if that is the next step. I am also wondering about the timings of tube feeding (and syringe feeding for that matter) for a diabetic cat who needs nutrition throughout the day. I am out of the house for work from about 6:30am-5:15pm and I am her sole caretaker. The timed autofeeder was a good solution for when she was eating on her own (and before her neuropathy set in and I had to move her feeder to be more accessible and then her brother got into her food). With assisted feeding I can't rely on that. Suggestions welcome!
Hi all,
Continuing Kit's progress in this new thread. Summary up to this point: I took Kit to the emergency vet on Saturday since she had a high ketones on her urine test strip after a few weeks of decreasing appetite. She stayed at the emergency vet until Monday morning (yesterday) when she transferred to the internal medicine department of a different hospital to be seen by an internal medicine specialist. They are trying to identify what triggered the DKA episode and get her appetite back.
I visited Kit this morning before work. She was happy to see me and ate 3 Churu tube treats (she inhaled the first two and took a little more time to eat the third but she finished it all). The vet tech said the overnight nurses had a hard time hearing Kit's heartbeat because she was purring so loudly. Her BG levels are back up in the 300s (I was there when the tech took Kit's 8am measurement and it was 330) and her ketones are 3.2. They are still waiting on the urinalysis results. I am supposed to get an official morning update later, and I will try to visit her again later today when I go home from work.
I don't know yet if she'll be able to go home tomorrow or if she'll have to stay another day or two, but I have been reading the links from my previous thread on tube feeding. The doctor warned me that diabetic cats are at a higher risk of complications from general anesthesia which has me worried about inserting a tube in her if that is the next step. I am also wondering about the timings of tube feeding (and syringe feeding for that matter) for a diabetic cat who needs nutrition throughout the day. I am out of the house for work from about 6:30am-5:15pm and I am her sole caretaker. The timed autofeeder was a good solution for when she was eating on her own (and before her neuropathy set in and I had to move her feeder to be more accessible and then her brother got into her food). With assisted feeding I can't rely on that. Suggestions welcome!
