Officially diagnosed - terrified

Status
Not open for further replies.

Pterodactyl

Member Since 2023
So I finally got Milo to the vet and I got everything I need, including a bottle of Prozinc. The only thing I am missing is the courage to get started. I keep procrastinating giving him the first dose. I'm terrified of the whole thing! I need someone to kick me in the butt and get me going with this!
 
Hi and welcome to you and Milo to the forum. It is normal to be a bit scared and overwhelmed in the beginning. We all were!
If Milo has been diagnosed and you have the Prozinc to start, do not wait as it’s important that diabetic cats get the insulin they need. Did the vet mention if Milo had any ketones at diagnosis?
What dose did the vet prescribe? Hopefully not more than 1 unit twice a day?
Are you feeding a low carb canned diet. We recommend feeding a diet of 10% carbs or less. I will link a food chart below. Feed a good meal before the dose and then give 2or 3 snacks during the all cycles. A snack is a teaspoon or 2 of low carb food.

I would recommend you think about hometesting the blood glucose as this is the best way you can keep Milo safe and you can see how well the dose of insulin is working. In other words, it takes the guesswork out of it.
We can help you with that.
If you live in the US, Walmart has a ReliOn premier meter and test strips for a very reasonable price. You will also need lancets size 26 or 28 gauge to prick the ear and some cotton balls to hold behind the ear when testing.
I will
Also post a link to information for new members below
 
We can give a virtual kick in the butt -- will that help? I'd encourage you to weigh the risks of giving insulin vs not giving insulin to a diabetic. If your home testing or notice your cat's behavior is "off" once you're giving insulin, you will have the support and knowledge from people here to intervene. If you don't give your diabetic cat insulin, there's not much we can help with and there's a good change your cat's life will be shortened considerably. We're all here because we opted to treat our cats.

Oh.... And if no one mentioned it, diabetic cat's can go into remission.
 
Hi and welcome to you and Milo to the forum. It is normal to be a bit scared and overwhelmed in the beginning. We all were!
If Milo has been diagnosed and you have the Prozinc to start, do not wait as it’s important that diabetic cats get the insulin they need. Did the vet mention if Milo had any ketones at diagnosis?
What dose did the vet prescribe? Hopefully not more than 1 unit twice a day?
Are you feeding a low carb canned diet. We recommend feeding a diet of 10% carbs or less. I will link a food chart below. Feed a good meal before the dose and then give 2or 3 snacks during the all cycles. A snack is a teaspoon or 2 of low carb food.

I would recommend you think about hometesting the blood glucose as this is the best way you can keep Milo safe and you can see how well the dose of insulin is working. In other words, it takes the guesswork out of it.
We can help you with that.
If you live in the US, Walmart has a ReliOn premier meter and test strips for a very reasonable price. You will also need lancets size 26 or 28 gauge to prick the ear and some cotton balls to hold behind the ear when testing.
I will
Also post a link to information for new members below

Hey, thanks for the quick reply!
The vet said he is keto free, thank God! She told me to start with 1U twice a day and then do a glucose curve after a week of the 1U.
Milo has been eating strictly wet food for several months now. Mostly Sheba but he has to switch up occasionally. He gets tired of the same food and will quit eating it.
I have a human meter and my vet told me I have to get a pet one for the curve, but I think I'm going to disregard as I'm on a tight budget and don't want to buy one. Is that bad? I also have the test strips and lancets and all that good stuff. Just lacking the strength to get started I guess. I'm really struggling financially right now and spent almost everything I had put back ($500) already. I just hope I can do this. It's scary.
 
It is good that he's already on wet food you just want to make sure it is also low carb, not all wet food is low carb, there is a big list with a lot of options so that you can switch when he gets bored of one and some are even quite budget friendly just pick the ones under 10% carbs ( here's the link https://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/threads/dr-pierson-new-food-chart.174147/)

It is perfectly ok to use a human meter, as a matter of fact most of us use human meters strips are cheaper in the US and for some of us not on the US human meters is all there is.

And you can do it, it is scary and hard at the begining but it gets easier as you get some practice and we are here to help you ask any doubts you have
 
So I finally got Milo to the vet and I got everything I need, including a bottle of Prozinc. The only thing I am missing is the courage to get started. I keep procrastinating giving him the first dose. I'm terrified of the whole thing! I need someone to kick me in the butt and get me going with this!
Ha! This was me last year too! It took me 2 months after diagnosis to get started. I was scared to death (mostly of hypos & still am) & thought maybe a change to a low carb diet alone would cure her, BUT I started low on the SLGS method & have still never gotten her so low that I'm having a panic attack. I'm still no expert by far, but at least my vet says she's regulated and she's had no symptoms since before starting insulin (Glargine). The sooner you start, the better for your cat. I'm still mad at myself for not starting sooner because now it's second nature & I'm so fast at it: could almost do it with my eyes closed. Your cat will feel so much better. Just set an alarm so you won't forget & put all the supplies together. Ppl on this forum encouraged me to get started. I've also been struggling financially & found that using Glargine (or brand name: Lantus) saved her life because I've had the same $56 vial for a year now & otherwise wouldn't have been able to afford her insulin. Also the ReliOn (at Walmart) meters, strips, lancets, & syringes are all reasonably priced & saved her too. There is a program on here, DCIN, that assists financially with supplies too if you're low income. Good luck & you have nothing to lose, but everything to gain for your furbaby's life.
 
Full disclosure: my girl was only on insulin for a few months in 2022 before she went into remission, so my experience with cat diabetes is limited, but as a type 1 diabetic myself, I have plenty of needle experience.

Is the shot itself part of what is scaring you away from getting started? If so, I promise you will get used to them. Insulin injections are quick and relatively painless with a fresh needle (don't reuse them), so you aren't going to be tormenting your cat. My girl is...feisty to the point that her vet put a warning on her file, and yet when I gave her insulin injections, she barely noticed. She knew the shots were coming and just patiently put up with them, and she still loved me afterwards.

You can do this! The people here are amazing, and I really think it's because of this forum that my Scully achieved remission and is doing so well. Take their advice and get started :bighug:
 
Well I was going to try starting him tonight but I tried testing him first and I pricked him twice and still didn't get enough blood! I feel like it's hurting him and I just broke down crying and being mad at myself for not being able to. Previously when I tested him I had my spouse do the dirty work. Unfortunately he isn't around near enough to do 12 intervals so now I'm panicking and hating myself.
 
Well I was going to try starting him tonight but I tried testing him first and I pricked him twice and still didn't get enough blood! I feel like it's hurting him and I just broke down crying and being mad at myself for not being able to. Previously when I tested him I had my spouse do the dirty work. Unfortunately he isn't around near enough to do 12 intervals so now I'm panicking and hating myself.
Don't be mad at yourself! I had trouble with that, too. (Heck, sometimes when I check my own blood sugar, I don't get any blood either and have to prick a second time...and I've been diabetic for over a decade.) But it got better. I used two tips that I picked up here: microwaving a sock full of dry rice to use as a heating pack to gently warm up the ear, and putting a thin layer of petroleum jelly on the spot you'll be pricking so that the blood will bead up when it comes out instead of spreading through the fur. My girlie absolutely hates having her ears touched, so that aspect of it never got better in the relatively short time I was having to test her, but getting blood out did get easier.

I remember reading that most cats tolerate ear pricking really well because they don't have a ton of nerve endings in that spot (not like your fingertips if you were to prick yourself), so be patient with yourself. You likely aren't hurting him. Is this roughly where you're poking?
ear_001-jpg.37102
 
Don't be mad at yourself! I had trouble with that, too. (Heck, sometimes when I check my own blood sugar, I don't get any blood either and have to prick a second time...and I've been diabetic for over a decade.) But it got better. I used two tips that I picked up here: microwaving a sock full of dry rice to use as a heating pack to gently warm up the ear, and putting a thin layer of petroleum jelly on the spot you'll be pricking so that the blood will bead up when it comes out instead of spreading through the fur. My girlie absolutely hates having her ears touched, so that aspect of it never got better in the relatively short time I was having to test her, but getting blood out did get easier.

I remember reading that most cats tolerate ear pricking really well because they don't have a ton of nerve endings in that spot (not like your fingertips if you were to prick yourself), so be patient with yourself. You likely aren't hurting him. Is this roughly where you're poking?
ear_001-jpg.37102
Yes that is where I was poking but I will try the rice thing. Maybe I should just go ahead and skip testing since I know he has been high everytime he has been checked? And he has never been given insulin, it is his first time. The vet had me practice shooting him with saline and it seemed a whole lot easier than testing to me.
 
Ok I did it! I just gave him a unit but I didn't test first. I'll work up to that. Thanks guys and sorry for freaking out on y'all lol.
 
What size lancets do you have? Size 26 or 28 is best for beginners.
Expect to fail in the beginning…we all did. And I panicked when I knew my husband would not always be around to help with testing…but I got there and so will you. Don’t forget to give a treat every time you ry…even if it doesn’t give a result. And buy yourself a box of chocolates and give your self a treat as well.
 
What size lancets do you have? Size 26 or 28 is best for beginners.
Expect to fail in the beginning…we all did. And I panicked when I knew my husband would not always be around to help with testing…but I got there and so will you. Don’t forget to give a treat every time you ry…even if it doesn’t give a result. And buy yourself a box of chocolates and give your self a treat as well.
I've been using 30g, I also have a few 28g.
 
Well I was going to try starting him tonight but I tried testing him first and I pricked him twice and still didn't get enough blood! I feel like it's hurting him and I just broke down crying and being mad at myself for not being able to. Previously when I tested him I had my spouse do the dirty work. Unfortunately he isn't around near enough to do 12 intervals so now I'm panicking and hating myself.
I will tell you what I've been doing since day 1 & never had a partner to help in testing either: using a lancing device (like ReliOn at Walmart) with ReliOn lancets ( I use 30 gauge: anything smaller didn't get me enough blood) because try as I might & no matter how many seasoned folks told me I didn't need one: I could not bring myself, nor was I any good at pricking my own baby's ear. Now I can't imagine it any other way. It is easy, fast, as well as time & stress-saving and after a bit of repetition: I got the blood on the 1st or 2nd try, up until now as well. It's still not always your fault though: Sometimes the ear will be too cold or you haven't applied the cloth ball long enough (I use a wash cloth piece wrapped around rice grains tied w/a rubberband & heat it up for 16 seconds in my 1000w microwave). I test it on my wrist 1st & my cat also will let me know if it's too hot by moving her head away from it, then I'll pull it away a few secs then put it back & she lets me, unless it's still too hot so I'll wait a bit to put it back on her. You dont have to hold it too long, somewhere around 15-20 seconds. Set the lancing device, put a cotton ball behind the ear flap you're pricking so you don't prick yourself & push the button. It pricks so fast, my cat doesn't even react like she knows what happened and I don't have to feel like I'm abusing her by making several failed attempts at jabbing her. I also hold the device against the ear for a split second afterwards which seems to facilitate getting blood out. Make sure the strip is in the meter & the display is on/requesting blood and within arms reach. Bring meter up to the ear to touch the blood drop as fast as you can before it runs or streaks by head movement, etc. (although sometimes still possible to test streaks, sometimes it will read Error on meter & you must retest). If its not enough blood, gently press around the drop to try to get more out If you use ReliOn meter (idk about others): just touch the TIP of strip to the blood but it must be enough so that the little square above it will fill up/turn red on its own, which isn't much, don't worry, if not: the meter will get an Error reading. Make sure their food is ready for immediately after this & a q-tip with whatever wound healing agent you're using to swipe the ear prick (I use coconut oil that many recommended on here plus I decided to also use an antimicrobial wound spray w/aloe vera for cats, I use NutriVet brand). The ear usually stops bleeding but if not, I hold it for a few secs with a cotton ball. And Voila, that's the hardest part. The insulin giving is a cinch.
 
Last edited:
Try using the 26 or 28 gauge lancet all the time. They are bigger lancets and you will get a better result. The smaller the gauge number, the bigger (or thicker) the lancet.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top