Zekono
Member
Hi Feline Diabetes Forum
We've had our cat (Hansel) on insuline for a few months now. The diabetes was diagnosed at the vet. He is getting Prozinc.
Symptoms were the usual ones(?):
- Staying near a water source, drinking a lot
- Huge amount of urine (pees at least 20 seconds, often longer)
- Dont remember if he ate more or less at the start, he did lose a lot of weight during that time (especially on his back, his belly stayed kinda fat)
- Now even on 5 IE he's eating SO much, for sure too much.
But the food doesn't come out well:
- Diarrhea
- Vomiting
It is hard to check how much he eats, the vet told us he always need to have food available.
- Dry food is accessible the whole day
- At injection time, he gets 1/3 of a Felix Sensations bag (28 gr/1 oz)
- The dry food that's available the whole day is Ultima Cat Urinary Tract
- It's hard to feed him at set times. We have another cat (Schmidt) with problems and he needs to be able to eat urinary tract food whenever. The problem is that Schmidt eats the whole day in very small doses. If we leave that out, Hansel would eat it all.
I don't know why the numbers stay more or less the same, 5 IE already seems so much and the mmol should be 8-10 at this dose, right? Could this be insuline resistance? We will try 5 IE this weekend.
The vet wants to start some new experimental medicine on him but we are a bit scared for that.
We bought a BG checker and measured each 2 hours.
2 IE is missing, we spoke with the vet about it and she told us to adjust to 2.5 IE then.
All the dose adjustions are in consultations with the vet.
Here is a table, the numbers are mmol
Thanks for taking your time to read
We've had our cat (Hansel) on insuline for a few months now. The diabetes was diagnosed at the vet. He is getting Prozinc.
Symptoms were the usual ones(?):
- Staying near a water source, drinking a lot
- Huge amount of urine (pees at least 20 seconds, often longer)
- Dont remember if he ate more or less at the start, he did lose a lot of weight during that time (especially on his back, his belly stayed kinda fat)
- Now even on 5 IE he's eating SO much, for sure too much.
But the food doesn't come out well:
- Diarrhea
- Vomiting
It is hard to check how much he eats, the vet told us he always need to have food available.
- Dry food is accessible the whole day
- At injection time, he gets 1/3 of a Felix Sensations bag (28 gr/1 oz)
Nutritional Additives:
Flavor Variations of the Country in Sauce:
- Vitamin A (655 IU/kg), Vitamin D3 (100 IU/kg), Vitamin E (15 IU/kg), Ferrous sulfate monohydrate (7.6 mg/kg), Calcium iodate anhydrous (0.19 mg/kg), Copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate (0.66 mg/kg), Manganese(II) sulfate monohydrate (1.5 mg/kg), Zinc sulfate monohydrate (13 mg/kg), Taurine (413 mg/kg)
- Vitamin A (724 IU/kg), Vitamin D3 (111 IU/kg), Vitamin E (16 IU/kg), Ferrous(II) sulfate monohydrate (8.3 mg/kg), Calcium iodate anhydrous (0.21 mg/kg), Copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate (0.73 mg/kg), Manganese(II) sulfate monohydrate (1.6 mg/kg), Zinc sulfate monohydrate (14.8 mg/kg), Taurine (456 mg/kg), Flavors.
- Locust Bean Gum: (2700 mg/kg)
Flavor Variations of the Country in Sauce:
- Crude protein: 12.5%
- Crude fat: 2.5%
- Crude fiber: 0.05%
- Crude ash: 2.5%
- Moisture: 80.0%
- Omega-6 fatty acids: 0.4%
Composition
Chicken (17%), corn protein, dehydrated poultry protein, corn meal, whole corn, dehydrated pork protein, whole wheat (6%), dried peas (5%), animal fat, whole barley (4%), hydrolyzed animal protein, minerals, dehydrated carrots (0.5%, equivalent to 4% fresh carrots).
Additives
Nutritional additives:
Vitamin A (27,000 IU/kg), vitamin D3 (1,200 IU/kg), vitamin E (650 mg/kg), vitamin C (ascorbyl monophosphate calcium sodium salt) (190 mg/kg), taurine (1,100 mg/kg), biotin (1 mg/kg), ferrous sulfate monohydrate (iron 86 mg) (260 mg/kg), potassium iodide (iodine 1.4 mg) (1.9 mg/kg), copper sulfate pentahydrate (copper 8.8 mg) (33 mg/kg), manganese sulfate monohydrate (manganese 40 mg/kg) (123 mg/kg), zinc sulfate monohydrate (zinc 149 mg) (405 mg/kg), sodium selenite (selenium 0.1 mg/kg) (0.2 mg/kg).
Analytical constituents:
Crude protein: 34.0% Crude fat: 14.0% Crude fiber: 2.0% Crude ash: 7.6% Sodium: 0.65% Omega-3 fatty acids: 0.2% Omega-6 fatty acids: 2.5%
Chicken (17%), corn protein, dehydrated poultry protein, corn meal, whole corn, dehydrated pork protein, whole wheat (6%), dried peas (5%), animal fat, whole barley (4%), hydrolyzed animal protein, minerals, dehydrated carrots (0.5%, equivalent to 4% fresh carrots).
Additives
Nutritional additives:
Vitamin A (27,000 IU/kg), vitamin D3 (1,200 IU/kg), vitamin E (650 mg/kg), vitamin C (ascorbyl monophosphate calcium sodium salt) (190 mg/kg), taurine (1,100 mg/kg), biotin (1 mg/kg), ferrous sulfate monohydrate (iron 86 mg) (260 mg/kg), potassium iodide (iodine 1.4 mg) (1.9 mg/kg), copper sulfate pentahydrate (copper 8.8 mg) (33 mg/kg), manganese sulfate monohydrate (manganese 40 mg/kg) (123 mg/kg), zinc sulfate monohydrate (zinc 149 mg) (405 mg/kg), sodium selenite (selenium 0.1 mg/kg) (0.2 mg/kg).
Analytical constituents:
Crude protein: 34.0% Crude fat: 14.0% Crude fiber: 2.0% Crude ash: 7.6% Sodium: 0.65% Omega-3 fatty acids: 0.2% Omega-6 fatty acids: 2.5%
- It's hard to feed him at set times. We have another cat (Schmidt) with problems and he needs to be able to eat urinary tract food whenever. The problem is that Schmidt eats the whole day in very small doses. If we leave that out, Hansel would eat it all.
I don't know why the numbers stay more or less the same, 5 IE already seems so much and the mmol should be 8-10 at this dose, right? Could this be insuline resistance? We will try 5 IE this weekend.
The vet wants to start some new experimental medicine on him but we are a bit scared for that.
We bought a BG checker and measured each 2 hours.
2 IE is missing, we spoke with the vet about it and she told us to adjust to 2.5 IE then.
All the dose adjustions are in consultations with the vet.
Here is a table, the numbers are mmol

Thanks for taking your time to read